No, typically you cannot bill a patient more than their allowed amount as stipulated by their insurance plan. Doing so would violate the terms of the insurance agreement and could lead to penalties for the healthcare provider. Patients should only be charged their copay, deductible, or coinsurance amounts as outlined in their policy. It's essential to review the specifics of the insurance contract to ensure compliance.
if primary paid more than allowed amount or if patient has primary insurance
There can be one or more charts depending on the doctors a patient has.
you have them pay twicw as more they come
It depends upon the patient's condition..more appropriate answer requires more details.
The legal amount is 2 hours straight. 3 hours if it is a good day. More time is allowed.
Is the patient responsible for deductible and coinsurance if primary insurance paid more than secondary would have allowed.
when more than the allowed amount of players cross the midfield line
You doctor is not obligated to send the bill to ANY insurance company unless the agreement between the carrier and the doctor requires it. More and more doctors are trying to relieve themselves of the paperwork nightmare of dealing with insurance companies. They will accept the negotiated rate but demad it at the time of service from the patient. It is then the problem for the patient to collect from the carrier.
I need more details in order to answer this question.
Actually, there are a limited amount of people in the Senate. Anyway, the bill is passed when there are more votes to pass the bill EX: 60 wants bill, 25 doesn't
The Medicare Part B approved amount is a reasonable amount of money that Medicare says the doctor or provider is allowed to bill. You can get more details here: http://www.medicare.gov/Publications/Pubs/pdf/10050.pdf See pages 25 and 47
more patient, most patient