In most situations, the school district's insurance will pay for the standard fare of medical bills. However, if one family sues another for damages, the school district then will most likely remain neutral ... the outcome of the suit will determine who is liable for paying the medical bills.
no
If the child is over age 18, then the parent is not responsible for the child's medical bills. The child is legally responsible for anything that the insurance policy did not pay.
It depends upon how the court order is worded. If the non-custodial parent is responsible for health insurance for the child, then you would need to go back to court. If he is responsible for paying the medical bills, then you would send him the bills. In any case, he remains on the hook for the child's medical bills.
i hope so
unless it is pretty fatal
Psychiatrists have to graduate medical school and be medical doctors in order to become psychiatrists of any kind. Medical school and your undergrad degree take 8 years to complete. Psychiatry requires residency experience (training) and another few years of schooling to get the degree. You are looking at a minimum of 12 years to become a child psychiatrist.
It is not the parents, but the estate that is responsible for any remaining debts. That will include medical bills. If there is not enough in the estate to cover them, someone will not get paid.
Child support arrears cannot be wiped out by a bankruptcy.
In general, expenses are not considered when determining child support (except for extraordinary expenses such as very high medical bills). Child support is based on a percentage of net income.
In most cases, unpaid medical bills will not result in jail time. However, the unpaid bills may be sent to collections and impact your credit score. It is important to communicate with the medical provider or collection agency to discuss payment options and avoid any further repercussions.
Only if the adult child signed an agreement to take such responsibility. If that is not the case, the medical bills will be included in the probate procedure and handled in accordance with state laws.
If a Homeowners dog bites a child and tears their lip open causing multiple surgeries what is the insurance liability to pay medical bills liability or compensation?