Conjoined twins are two individual people, regardless of their medical situation. So it follows that each person would have the same rights and responsibilities as any other person. That includes his or her own social security number.
If you have a health insurance policy (Medical Insurance) it will pick up where your auto coverage left off.
The American Medical Association provides a detailed article on medical insurance billing and coding. If this is not good enough then other insurance company probably explains in online. If this still doesn't suffice one could go to their local insurance company for guidance.
Probably not. Supplemental health insurance is designed to fill holes not covered by major medical insurance plans: deductibles, co-pays, co-insurance, policy limitations, income replacement, and non medical expenses such extra travel, lodging expenses, etc. Major medical insurance is designed to cover your primary need - catastrophic losses associated with a sickness or injury. Supplemental insurance should not be viewed as a replacement to major medical coverage.
If your condo is insured, you can receive enough cash to replace your damaged belongings. This type of home insurance gives you security and peace of mind, which are definitely worth the additional expense you will pay for the policy.
Not really enough information given to answer this. IF the employer let his health insurance for his employees lapse - he should have notifed them that their medical insurance and their cards were no good anymore. HOWEVER - there are too many other scenarios to make a general statement.
the passenger may possibly sue, or if you get along well enough, they will ask you to pay the medical bills.
If you are old enough to have a driver's license, then you are old enough to have auto insurance ... simple as that!
When you file an insurance claim, if you do not have enough insurance coverage, under insurance claims can be the result. Under insurance is a term used when calculating claims when the coverage is not enough and the policy has undervalued the amount insured.
Since Pedestrians always have the Right of Way, It is very rare if not impossible to find them at fault unless fraud or gross negligence can be established. Traditionally The drivers liability insurance will pay their medical bills. It depends on your state's laws, but typically -- and strangely enough -- you'll find that the auto insurance will cover the pedestrian's medical bills. On the other hand, if your state doesn't require you to carry medical coverage (either Medpay or PIP) on your car insurance, the pedestrian might have to go to his or her health carrier. The reasoning behind this is that, despite liability, it's against public policy to not cover the medical bills of a pedestrian hit by an automobile. If auto insurance didn't pick up those bills, it would have a cascade effect on all the medical providers and vendors who attended the pedestrian.
These would be tax deductible under Medical Expenses on Schedule A if you have enough expenses to overcome the threshold and itemize. You cannot use any medical expenses that are reimbursed or paid for by insurance.
If you do not make enough to afford health insurance, your state may have programs to help you depending on your needs. For example, Indiana has medicaid, but also Hoosier Healthwise that you pay into. You can also look into sliding scale fee doctors in your area.
After 24 months on Social Security Disability you are eligible for medicare. Actually, at the age of 38 a member of my family who worked for nearly 20 years prior to a permanent medical disablity then became a recipient of Social Security Disability income and was on Medicare within a month. There was no 2 year wait. If a person has not worked enough hours and receives SSI (Supplemental Security Income) they qualify for Medicaid instead of Medicare.