You need to ask your doctor for an itemized bill, then contact your insurance company and ask for a health insurance claim. Fill in your form and ( make sure you make copies as proof to avoid errors ) review it then and then send it to get your health insurance claim.
Not against your own insurance.
Auto insurance, and if you are hurt by the accident, then health insurance too, but you will need health insurance for the second to file a claim for injuries, and health insurance is optional. Auto insurance is required by law. If it is someone else's fault however, then they must pay for all the damage to you, your car, and themselves.
You can file a claim against your insurance company for an action caused by another person with no insurance if you are covered for such an occurance. An example would be if you had uninsured motorist coverage and were hit by someone without auto insurance. However if you want to file a 'claim' against the person directly who has no insurance there is no one to file the claim against. The only alternative here is to sue the person in court.
You cannot go behind someone's back and file a claim on their insurance. If it is a major injury you can file suit and they will have to provide it to their insurance company so that the insurance company will defend them or settle the claim. This is to force the issue.
One can file a claim with Affirmative Insurance by going on the official Affirmative Insurance website. Then one can press the button 'Submit A Claim' to file a claim.
You have 10 days to file a claim with your insurance company.
Yes, you do not need a police report to file a insurance claim.
The place that someone would go submit an accident claim is based on the claim and the company. If it is an auto claim and someone has AAA insurance, they can file a claim on the website or call an agent.
A timely limit in filing a claim with AARP health insurance is 30 days. It is always recommended to file as soon as possible.
That's not very likely. The insurance company does not file your claim, they accept your claim notice from you. You have to file your claim with the company, not the other way around.
The doctor did not file the insurance claim because the patient's insurance policy did not cover the specific treatment or service provided.
You do. You can always file a claim. The insurance company may not honor the claim and may reject it, but they can't stop you from filing one.