While waiting for your insurance to process your claim, it is listed in our billing software as insurance responsibility. Once we have received the payment and/or eob (explanation of benefits) from the insurance, the amount due from the patient is then transferred in our system to the patients responsibility. We are literally transferring the responsible party from the insurance to the patient.
Yes. When you receive a bill from your employer that would mean that they can bill you for the medical insurance while you were employed by them.
Cough up the money when your sick. I mean that literally, that would be way much easier!!
medical insurance
I'm guessing you might mean your medical records? Your insurance records would be wherever you put them. Your medical records, or records of insurance payments would be with the medical provider.
A crossover claim is the transfer of claim data from Medicare to those of another relevant insurer, private or public. The recipient of the information might be Medicaid, a state agency or a private insurance company.
It's secondary or tertiary insurance that is held to cover any medical expenses the primary insurance policy does not cover or does not cover completely.
This does mean expenses are not covered by insurance. If this is what the divorce decree says, then you are responsible for these bills.
Do you mean business insurance right? No, they are collateral of each other. Health insurance can be you against your medical bill or treatment in the hospitals. While, Business insurance is used against fire damage, electricity spark damage. For this clarification you can visit Rais Insurance site as they have abundant knowledge to clear your point.
A cheap medical insurance simply allows the person to have a small blanket of security if a large medical emergency occurs while paying a minimum amount for the insurance each month.
1) Lower Motor Neuron 2) Letter of Medical Necessity (insurance)
bill type 131 is an out patient medical facility bill... billed on a UB
A medical claim is the application for compensation against a health insurance policy or against another's liability insurance policy for the covered portion of a covered event.