Yes. What the insurance covers is specific to each companies' plan. Depending on the plan your employer purchased, certain procedures may be covered. The best bet is to call the insurer to have them check into the benefit available for the procedure you want. If it is a customary procedure, you may have more luck if your physician writes a letter to the insurance company recommending it. Alternative medicine such as acupuncture and others, while they do often work, are on your own dime for most.
yes they are responsible
Generally speaking, the person responsible for the accident is responsible for the damage. If the responsible person refuses to pay ot doesn't pay fast enough, the other can sue them if they wish.
This is called double Billing
If a creditor refuses to give you payment address, you still owe them money. This might be frustrating but does not get you off the hook.
If your contractor refuses to give you copies or originals of the insurance papers, contact the insurance company themselves. If the insurance company name is not known, call the state you live in to inquire.
It depends if they really and truly are responsible for the denied charges. Meaning if the insurance company denied the claim due to something the PROVIDER didn't do, (timely filing, no auth obtained, etc),the charges would have to written off. Other than that, if the patient refuses to pay, let them know the account will go into collections.
You need to include payment agreements, what happens if he refuses to pay, how much time he has to get out, things he is responsible for in the building, things you are responsible for (damages or things that break), the condition the building needs to be in when he leaves, how long the lease is for.
yes. you can sue an at fault driver if his insurance company refuses to pay your claim. it would not be proper to sue the insurance company.
be patient. It will in time.
no. it depends what company
Respect the patient and stop asking.
call security or kick them out