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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
It depends where you live. There are a number of ways you can pay for treatment either on the NHS or privately: Pay-as-you-go. 'Capitation' schemes. Dental insurance. Private medical insurance. Cash plans. Treatment loans.
You will have to check with with your medical insurance provider to find out. Typically no as this would be covered by separate dental insurance.
You're going to have to pay for all of your medical costs if you're self employed, since you don't have an employer to pay your insurance for you. You're going to want to provide yourself with good medical (health) and dental insurance, and life insurance isn't a bad idea either.
"For a low cost dental insurance plan, expect to pay $0-$15. For the Dental PPO or PDN, or for the Dental Indemenity, you will not pay a co-pay when you visit the dentist."
probably not
Many of us do, but it depends on your health insurance contract, not on state law.
This depends on what dental insurance you have. You could get up to a 100% discount. Most insurance companies will pay the majority of your dental bills.
How can I get government help to pay for medical/dental help?
Your medical plan would pay if you needed to be in a hospital to have a tooth extracted, for example. For everyday care in the office, your medical plan does not pay for the procedure codes that a dentist bills.
Delta dental is a dental insurance company. Delta dental will pay 50%-80% of the cost for the extraction of wisdom teeth.
do you have to pay taxes on medical insurance in the state of Washington