In some states, you cannot bill the patient if you accepted her/him as a Medicaid patient.
If you did not accept the patient as a Medicaid patient, you may bill the patient.
The answer should be none. Because if the service is not covered and the provider does not intend to bill Medicaid, then the provider would expect payment at the time of the service.
Medicaid may deny a claim for any one of a number of reasons: submitted too late; service not covered or needs prior approval; clerical error such as procedure code doesn't match description of service, etc.When this happens, you are responsible for the bill. However, in Illinois and perhaps other states, you may ask Medicaid to review the bill. In Illinois, you are not responsible for a bill if the provider accepted you as a Medicaid patient and Medicaid denied the claim due to the provider's error(s).
All 50 States have Medicaid, although coverage varies.
All 50 states have Medicaid, although coverage varies.
Businesses do not offer Medicaid - States administer Medicaid.
Medicaid is administered by the States; salaries vary considerably.
No.
Medicaid is administered jointly by federal and state governments. State participation in Medicaid is voluntary, and all states have chosen to offer Medicaid coverage to their residents
About 90% of Medicaid money is Federal. The rest is provided by the States.
Medicaid is administered by the States. The Federal government reimburses most of the expense.
None
Different states offer different forms of medicaid. Depending on the state it will determing if the assisted living is covered by your medicaid.
Medicare and Medicaid are the responsibility of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid, which is part of DHHS. However, Medicaid is administered by the States.