The most common way to get medical and dental insurance is through one's employer. However, one can also get medical and dental insurance directly from many insurance companies by going to their website or calling them.
One that meets your needs and is affordable. Way too many variables to pick one plan or even one provider. If you are in the market talk to an independent insurance agent who specializes in medical and dental coverage.
Not necessarily, medical and dental insurance coverage relates to whether that child is your dependent, i.e. do you have legal responsibility for them. Often in divorces, the court will make the non-custodial parent, i.e. the one that the child does not live with, responsible for providing medical and dental insurance.
Dental Coverage is not usually covered by General Medical Insurance because it is too expensive.
I have medical and dental insurance, but I do not have rx insurance. If you don't have rx insurance you have to pay for all your medicines. I haven't seen where dental insurance pays for medicines. Usually only rx insurance will
No, medical insurance and dental insurance are two different products. In fact, employers often go through different insurance companies for each in an effort to find the right price. Your medical insurance card will typically not cover dental, although big ticket things like a broken jaw or oral surgery are actually considered medical. However, an employer who offers medical in many cases (but not all) also offers dental to its employees.
Not usually; the insurance will require a medical code to process the claim.
One can get student dental insurance when one approaches the insurance company called United Healthcare that offers flexible student health and dental plans.
Insurance for one's personal property such as auto or homeowner's insurance is tax deductible. Other tax deductible insurances are medical and dental insurances.
18000
It depends if it's part of your coverage. Review your policy to find out. If there is no dental coverage, ask your insurance provider or broker if you can add a dental plan to your policy or add a dental rider.
No. The billing codes for medical and dental are completely separate. Dental codes beginning with the letter D and are followed by 4 or more numbers. eg. D1110 for an adult prophy/cleaning Dentists are only allowed to bill for dental treatment with dental codes and not allowed to use medical codes. Billing with a medical code while performing a dental procedure for which a dental code exists is considered insurance fraud and punishable by law.
Seniors can find good rates through AARP. If one has a subscription, AAA can be a good source for medical and dental insurance as well.