Any insurance policy can be canceled in one of a couple of ways:
1. Call the insurance company or the agent through whom you bought it and explain that you wish to terminate coverage. If you have recently paid a premium, they may ask whether you wish the policy to stay in force until the end of the period for which the premium was paid. If you do, tell them so and you will be covered until the end of that period. If not, the policy will end before the end of the term and the insurer will pro-rate the return of the last premium.
2. Do not pay the premium that is next due. Generally, there is a grace period for the payment of premiums (often 10-15 days). If the premium is not paid by the expiration of that time, coverage will end for non-payment of premium.
Depends on your policy
Pacific Blue Cross is a provider of health care services in British Columbia, Canada. They offer health care plans for individuals, families as well as small to medium businesses.
Blue Cross Blue Shield may offer some coverage for home health care depending on the type of policy one has. It is wise to read all materials available on your policy and contact customer service to change to another policy if necessary.
AnswerGenerally yes but the policy may have specific rules.
Premera Blue Cross is an insurance company, not a location or community, so it does not have a population. However, it serves millions of members throughout the Pacific Northwest region of the United States.
The Southern Cross on the flag represents NZ's location in the South Pacific Ocean(blue background) :)
What Blue Cross Blue Shield coves depends on the policy one has. Policies differ and some will not cover procedures like lap band surgery.
Blue cross Blue shield through your work is primay, as you are the insured on that policy. Tricare from your spouse will be secondary.
The Anthem Blue Cross court case was about policyholders suing Anthem Blue Cross for changing deductible amounts and policy limits midyear. Some policyholders' deductables have doubled in the past five years.
Benefits available to or for the spouse/children or gaurdians of the policy holder.
You'd have to ask your individual policy holder to be sure, but most of them do.
No, it's considered experimental / investigational.