If both parents are born in the same month, the day of birth can determine which plan is primary. Most often, the parents will choose which plan will be primary for their family rather than allow it to be chosen by date.
Parents, whose birthday month falls first in the year is the primary payers
It goes off the month in which the parent was born! Who ever was born 1st is primary. It does not go off the age!
well depending on how old you are you can just ask and most parents will understand or another option is you can visit your local planned parenthood and get all the info. you will need and they might give you a month of free birth controll but you need to be open with your parents and let them know where you are in your life
I believe the only way to determine if your child has achondroplasia before birth is by having an ultrasound. They would measure the bones to determine if the child is growing accordingly to age, however it has to be done after the 4th or 5th month of pregnancy, because that's when it would show up on the ultrasound.
The parent who was born first in the year. In other words if the mom was born in June and the father was born in July, then the primary insurance would be covered by the mother. This also applies to both parents being born in the same month. Whoever was born first is the primary holder of the insurance.
Month of birth of bhadon-chaturthi-1978?
The least popular birth month is March.
Tasman was born in 1603. The exact date or month of his birth is unknown.
Primary elections are held in April.
He was born in the month of October.
Birthstones are based off of the month of birth, not the date of birth; therefore, the birthstones for the month of Septemberis sapphire.
Standard coordination of benefits goes in the following order for an active employee, not a retiree: Employee: Policy in which you are the subscriber is the primary. If you are the policyholder on more than one policy, whichever policy has been in effect the longest is primary. Dependent children: For natural parents still married, or without court order, coordination of benefits follows birthday rule. The parent who's birthday falls first within the year (goes by month, not year) is primary. For parents with court order, the parent named is primary. For parents divorced/separated with spouses and no court order, custodial natural parent is primary, then spouse of custodial parent, then non-custodial parent, then spouse of non-custodial parent. If dependent children are also covered by the state, state health policies always are last in line to pay benefits. For retirees (65+) still on employer policies and covered by Medicare, Medicare is primary and employer policies are secondary.