Tricare is the provider/administrator/formal name of the health care system for military personnal and their dependents. In theory, as long as the divorce is not final, the pregnant woman remains the soldier's spouse, and is entitled to benefits because of that status. Those medical benefits include maternity benefits.
It is recommended that you contact Tricare for specific guidance on these facts. There are many telephone numbers for the Tricare program, divided in part by geographic area, so you should Google Tricare and find the one that seems most applicable.
She divorced both of her husbands.
The husbands own insurance would be primary, and his wife's would be secondary.
and sometimes after that.
It is insurance fraud if anyone but your husband signed the application.
In order to ensure that a wife collects her deceased husband's insurance policy, it is beneficial to transfer the beneficiary of the policy while the husband is still alive. If the beneficiary of the policy is also deceased, it would be wise to seek legal help.
Have your husband call the insurance agent to make this change.
Yes! If she has a state-funded insurance also, the husband's coverage will be secondary.
No, the baby is not considered your husbands. (If you are sure that the baby was because of someone else, and not your husband.)
Betty's first husband was Dick Barker, who she married and divorced in 1945. Betty White's second husband was Lane Allen. They were married in 1947 and divorced in 1949. Allen Ludden was Betty's third husband. They were married in 1963. Allen died in 1981.
Good Luck. You will be asking your husbands insurance to pay for the birth of a child that is not his. Talk to the insurance company and also check with state law. Some states the law is that a child born during a marriage is the child of the husband legally unless challenged in court.
No..... I have been in insurance for 20 yrs. Once you are divorced she has no rights to your information.
the answer is a simple yes if the babies father is your husband