A medical assistant when working under the supervision of a employing physician should be covered under the employers insurance.
The assistant could still get their own malpractice coverage though if additional security or a higher coverage limit is desired.
Yes. Physician Assistants are licensed clinicians who practice medicine under the direct or indirect supervision of a physician. They need malpractice insurance. Usually this is included in the employment package.
form_title=Malpractice Insurance form_header=Looking for affordable malpractice insurance to protect your medical career? Get the coverage you need to protect your career from unexpected claims. Malpractice insurance needed:= () Individual Malpractice Liability Insurance () Business Malpractice Liability Insurance If you chose Business Malpractice Liability Insurance, how many employees need insured?=_ What is your professional trade?=_ Have you ever had a malpractice claim against you or your business? = () Yes () No
Yes, all doctors must carry malpractice insurance. Some facilities will have malpractice coverage for the entire facility to include the doctors employed there. Some doctors will need to get individual malpractice insurance.
You would sell Malpractice insurance the same way you would any other line of insurance. First identify your market, then define a way to reach out to those people who likely need malpractice coverage.
Yes. They require public liability insurance and malpractice insurance.
Neither.
Any medical offices would need errors and omissions insurance in order to avoid to get sued for malpractice. Medical insurance also have a malpractice insurance to further protect themselves from any additional damages.
I think there was no need legal malpractice insurance for lawyers in Wichita, KS. You can get the more information about this from the following website wichita.citysearch.com
You will need to contact an agent for this answer there are too many variables, with respect to premiums.
$1 million/$ 3 million limits are pretty standard.
Yes. The cost is relatively low, compared to human physician malpractice insurance, but veterinarians can be and are sued for malpractice.
Attorneys require lawyer malpractice insurance to protect them from lawsuits enacted by their clients. If a lawyer does what a client deems to be an insufficient or substandard job, or feels that the lawyer did not represent them properly, the client has the right to sue the lawyer. Because of this, lawyers often invest in malpractice insurance to protect themselves in case a client wishes to enact a lawsuit against them and their work.