Yes, Medicare can refuse treatments for heart problems in elderly patients. If Medicare believes that there are cheaper and equally effective alternatives, or believes that the treatments are not evidence-based, they may be refused.
Providers are not required to take Medicare (or Medicaid) patients. Hospitals are required to provide emergency care regardless of ability to pay.
Yes. A doctor can refuse for any reason and no reason.
Providers are not required to take patients as Medicare or Medicaid patients. However, there might be an ethical issue if a provider stops ongoing treatment due to inability to pay.
the first 20 days at 100%, the next 100 days at 80%, but you must show progress in you rehab therapy if you refuse or are unable to rehabilitate medicare pulls out and it is your bill.
Because they have a limited list of things they will pay for. Try a generic.
Any medical association has the right to not accept medicare, they have always had this right, and after ObamaCare get done screwing things up, we will be lucky to even have Medicare Don't believe anything Obama tells you, because he is a professional liar, as are all politicians. The people of this country had better grab their butts and hang on, we haven't seen anything YET.
No, Medicare is a Fee For Service Program, but doctors must contract with Medicare to treat Medicare patients
If you suspect Medicare fraud contact Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE or visit their website at www.medicare.gov.
Yes; by definition, Medicare supplemental insurance "supplements" Medicare A & B.
if you are enrolled in it no, you can decline to enroll on medicare
Are glasses covered by medicare?