What Types Of Dental Plan has the Best For
Benefits
by Internet
Dental Alliance
Dental PPO, POS, DHMO
Or Fee For Service
Indemnity and
managed care
dental plans differ in their basic approach. Put broadly, the
major differences concern choice of providers, affordable out-of-pocket costs
for covered services, and how bills are paid.
Usually, an indemnity dental plan offers more choice of dentists than managed care plans.
An indemnity dental plan pays their share of the costs of a service only after
they receive a bill.
Managed care plans have agreements with certain
dentists to give a range of services to plan members a family at an
affordable
cost. In general, you will have less paperwork and lower
out-of-pocket costs if you select a managed care-type plan and a
broader choice of dentists if you select an indemnity-type plan.
Managed care dental plans are Dental PPOs, POSs,
and Dental HMOs (DHMOs).
What is a Dental PPO, POS, and DHMO?
A Dental PPO (Preferred Provider
Organization) provides dental care to its members through a network
of dentists who offer discounted fees to its affordable dental plan members. You can
typically use dentists out of the PPO's network, but you will only
be reimbursed the discounted fee for the services rendered - you
will need to pay any additional amount yourself.
A DHMO (Dental Health Maintenance
Organization) provides you dental services through a network of
providers in exchange for some form of prepayment. If you use a
dentist out of the established network of providers, you may be
responsible for paying the entire bill.
A Dental POS (Point of Service) plan allows
a member to use either a DHMO network dentist or to seek care from a
dentist not in the HMO network. Members choose in-network care or
out-of-network care at the time they make their dental appointment
and usually incur higher out-of-pocket costs for out-of-network
care.
What is an Indemnity Dental Plan?
An indemnity
dental plan is commonly known as a
fee for service or traditional plan. If you select an Indemnity plan
you have the freedom to visit any dentist. You do not need referrals
or authorizations; however, some plans may require you to
pre-certify for certain procedures. Most indemnity plans require you
to pay a deductible. After you have paid your deductible, indemnity
policies typically pay a percentage of "usual and customary" charges
for covered services; often the insurance company pays 80% and you
pay 20%. Most plans have an annual out of pocket maximum and once
you've reached this they will pay 100% of all "usual and customary"
charges for covered services.
Many dental indemnity plans also require a
waiting period before covering certain services.
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