You will need to get your patients insurance information and bill them according to the terms of the insurance plan they are in, it's the same as any other patient.
No. But tell your Medicaid agency about this because providers should bill your private insurance first.
It depends on who they work for. If they work for the state or a private institution, I would imagine some sort of salary. If they work for themselves in private practice, they most likely bill each individuals insurance company etc..
Absolutely - but let the child's Medicaid caseworker know so that providers will bill the private insurance first.
Yes, you can have both Medicaid and a private health insurance plan. The Medicaid plan will pay after your private plan pays. This means that your doctor (or hospital or other service provider) will bill your private plan first; then they will send the private plan's explanation of benefits (called an "EOB") to Medicaid.
After the encounter and after the payer's payment is posted
Yes, if you are contracted with the secondary payor, PPO contract, HMO contract, etc, you are bound by your contract to bill the plan
The "ObamaCare" health insurance reform bill does not generally provide insurance itself, but requires people to have private insurance among other changes. Insurance will almost certainly not pay for breast augmentation, regardless of the recent changes in law.
Health care bill is the amount reserved for health care policies by the government usually in the form of public sector insurance programs or private sector insurance companies. The purpose is to provide improved quality of health care in low cost.
Certainly if there is the contractual right to do so between the lab and the office.
I am sure that Bill Gates does have his own insurance.
Car insurance and possibly health insurance if the car insurance does no cover the entire bill.
The insurance company will not send you a bill. More likely they will reject the claim from the pharmacy and the drug store will bill you.