Catastrophic health insurance plans are made to give an safety net to those who ends up having a unexpected medical cost that they cannot pay back. It is a plan that can work with individual and family health insurance plans that focus on the coverage of being in the hospital or being very sick.
Catastrophic Insurance is an insurance policy that is minimum coverage and only protects you in the situation of a catastrophe. There would be no need for you to buy an insurance policy like that.
MSAs would combine a high-deductible catastrophic health insurance plan with an employer-paid account that employees could use to pay their regular medical expenses
I'm guessing you might mean your medical records? Your insurance records would be wherever you put them. Your medical records, or records of insurance payments would be with the medical provider.
The best way to determine the best level of coverage for catastrophic medical insurance, is to first figure out how healthy you are and what type of coverage you would like. There are many websites out there that will help in figuring out the best level of coverage for you and you family.
The cost to get no medical exam life insurance is about $500-1000 a year.
Your PIP insurance will in most cases cover your medical expenses even if you do not possess the required health insurance in Texas. This would pay for your medical expenses in a wreck.
Many health insurance plans do not provide coverage outside of the United States; if they do, it may not be a full coverage. Also, specialty medical insurance for traveling abroad can cover situations that your medical insurance will not, such as medical evacuation.
That's a good attorney question, but I would not think so. Copay and deductable would be medical expenses, not medical insurance.
There are many different medical insurance companies out there that will offer an insurance policy for your cat. In Canada the best place to start would be ASPCA Pet Health Insurance.
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.
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.
The obvious answer would be NO, why would you have to carry insurance on a child that is now considered an adult.