Possibly if they are auto accident related.
Also, if you have Med Pay on your own insurance.. any other bills that may not cover on the at-fault drivers' insurance, can fall back on yours but your rate won't increase if you're found not At Fault.
If you have a health insurance policy (Medical Insurance) it will pick up where your auto coverage left off.
The at fault drivers auto insurance policy would pay for medical bills up to the policy limits for which that insured driver is liable. If there is no insurance then there is no coverage. If no one has Auto Insurance to cover you, hopefully you have a major Medical Insurance Policy in place. Major medical will cover your medical expenses even from a car accident.
Medical bills for yourself and anyone else in your car in case of an accident
Medical bills for yourself and anyone else in your car in case of an accident
Medical bills for yourself and anyone else in the car in the case of an accident- apex
If you have medical payments in your insurance. Liability only does not pay medical benefits. And the medical bills have to be the result of an auto accident.
Yes they can.
They will pay the provider of medical care who bills them for the medical care provided. Your health insurance will not pay any amounts until they have proof that your medical insurance on your auto policy has paid and been exhausted. Also, it is illegal to double collect for any costs relating to any kind of insurance except for life insurance.
Yes, you need to respond. Your claims will not get paid if you don't. You are being sent this letter because of the subrogation or third party liability clause of your policy. They are trying to find out if someone else should be responsible for the bills. Health insurance pays secondary to any auto insurance policy.
Yes, every liability policy has bodily insurance coverage attached to it. Therefore, their insurance should pay any medical bills you may be charged for.
If you mean are your medical bills covered -- and assuming your state requires medical coverage on auto insurance policies -- then, no, you wouldn't be covered by any policy of the driver's since, of course, no policy exists. However, if you have your own auto policy, that policy would then become primary. After that, your health insurance would be primary. Unfortunately for the uninsured driver, if you do have to go through your own health insurance, there's a big possibility that they will go after the driver for any payments they make, particularly if a driver is legally required to carry auto insurance in your state (again, insurance that included medical coverage).
The insurance company would pay them directly to make sure they are paid.