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The availability of dental care to a patient. This can be determined
by location, transportation, type of dental insurance plan services in the area,
etc.
Accident -
An event that is unforeseen, unexpected, and unintended.
Accidental Bodily Injury
- Physical injury sustained as the result of an accident.
Accumulation Period
- Period during which the insured incurs eligible dental expenses to
satisfy a deductible for the dental insurance plans.
Actively-At-Work
- Most group dental insurance plans state that if an employee is
not actively at work on the day the policy goes into effect, the
coverage will not begin until the employee does return to work.
Actual Charge
- The actual amount charged by a dentist for dental services
rendered.
Actuary -
Accredited insurance mathematician who calculates premium rates,
reserves, and dividends and who prepares statistical studies and
reports.
Acute Care
- Skilled, medically necessary care provided by dental and nursing
personnel in order to restore a person to good health.
Additional Drug Benefit List
- Prescription drugs listed as commonly prescribed by dentists for
patients' long-term use. Subject to review and change by the dental
insurance
plans involved. Also called drug maintenance list.
Administrative Services Only (ASO)
Agreement - Contract between an
insurer (or its subsidiary) and a group employer, eligible group,
trustee, or other party, in which the insurer provides certain
administrative services. These services may include actuarial
support, plan design, claims processing, data recovery and analysis,
benefits communication, financial advice, dental care conversions,
data preparation for governmental reports, and stop-loss coverage.
Adjusted Community Rating (ACR)
- Community rating adjusted by factors specific to a particular
group. Also known as factored rating.
Admissions/1,000
- The number of admissions for each 1,000 members of the dental
plan.
Admits -
The number of admissions to a hospital (including outpatient and
inpatient facilities).
Adverse Selection
- Tendency of those who are poorer-than-average dental risks to
apply for, or maintain, insurance coverage.
Age Change
- The date on which a person's age, for insurance purposes, changes.
In most Life Insurance contracts this is the date midway between the
insured's natural birth dates. Dental insurers frequently use the
age of the previous birth date for rate determinations. On the date
of age change, a person's age may change to that of the last birth
date, the nearer birth date, or the next birth date, depending upon
the way in which the rating structure has been established by that
particular insurer.
Age Limits
- Ages below and above which an insurance company will not accept
applications or renew policies.
Age/Sex Factor
- Compares the age and sex risk of dental costs of one group
relative to another. An age/sex factor above 1.00 indicates higher
than average risk of dental insurance plans costs due to that factor. Conversely, a
factor below 1.00 indicates a lower than average risk. This
measurement is used in underwriting.
Age/Sex Rates
(ASR) - Separate rates are established for each grouping of age and
sex categories. Preferred over single and family rating because the
rates and premiums automatically reflect changes in the age and sex
content of the group. Also sometimes called table rates.
Agent -
Insurance company representative licensed by the state who solicits,
negotiates, or effects insurance contracts and who provides services
to the policyholder for the insurer.
Allied Health Personnel
- Health personnel who perform duties, which would otherwise have to
be performed by physicians, optometrists, dentists, podiatrists,
nurses, and chiropractors. Also called paramedical personnel.
Allocated Benefits
- Payments authorized for specific purposes with a maximum specified
for each. In hospital policies, for instance, there may be scheduled
benefits for X-rays, drugs, dressings, and other specified expenses.
Allowable Charge
- The lesser of the actual charge, the customary charge and the
prevailing charge. It is the amount on which Medicare will base its
Part B payment.
Allowable Costs
- Charges that qualify as covered expenses.
Ancillary Services
- Dental care services that patients receive
from providers other than primary care dentists.
Ancillary Benefits
- Benefits for miscellaneous hospital charges.
Approved Charge
- Amounts paid under Medicare as the maximum fee for a covered
service.
Approved Dental Care Facility or Program
- A facility or program that has been approved by a dental care plan
as described in the contract.
Assignment of Benefits
- A method where the person receiving the dental benefits assigns
the payment of those benefits to a dentist or hospital.
Average Cost Per Claim
- The total cost of administrative and/or dental services divided by
the number of units of exposure such as costs divided by number of
admissions, or cost divided by number of outpatient claims, etc.
Average Length of Stay (ALOS)
- The total number of patient days divided by
the number of admissions and discharges during a specified period of
time. This gives the average number of days in the hospital for each
person admitted.
Average Wholesale Price (AWP)
- Under the Medicare catastrophic coverage act, payment for
prescription drugs is limited to the lowest of the pharmacy's actual
charge, the sum of the AWP for the drug plus an administrative
allowance, or effective 1992, the 90th percentile of pharmacy
charges.
Base Capitation
- The total amount which covers the cost of dental care per person,
minus any mental dental or substance abuse services, pharmacy, and
administrative charges.
Basic Hospital Expense Insurance
- Hospital coverage providing benefits for room, board and
miscellaneous expenses for a specified number of days.
Benefit Levels
- The maximum amount a person is entitled to receive for a
particular service or services as spelled out in the contract with a
dental plan or insurer.
Benefit Package
- A description of what services the insurer or dental plan offers
to those covered under the terms of a dental insurance contract.
Benefit Period
- Defines the period during which a Medicare beneficiary is eligible
for Part A benefits. A benefit period is 90 days, which begins the
day the patient is admitted to a hospital and ends when the
individual has not been hospitalized for a period of 60 consecutive
days.
Billed Claims
- The amounts submitted by a dental care provider for services
provided to a covered individual.
Binding Receipt
- A receipt given for the payment that accompanies an application
for insurance. If the policy is approved, the payment "binds" the
company to make the policy effective from the date of receipt.
Birthday Rule
- One method of determining which parent's dental coverage will be
primary for dependent children. The parent whose birthday falls
earliest in the year will be considered as having the primary plan.
Board-certified
- A designation that a dentist has successfully completed an
approved educational program and evaluation process by the American
Board of Dental Specialties (ABMS) which includes an examination
designed to assess the knowledge, skills, and experience required to
provide quality patient care in a given specialty.
Board Eligible
- A professional person or dentist who is eligible to take a
specialty examination.
Broker -
Person licensed by the state that places business with several
insurers; the broker, although paid a commission by the insurer,
represents the buyer rather than the insurance company.
COBRA -
See Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986.
Capitation
- A method of paying for dental services on a
per-person rather than a per-procedure basis. Under capitation, an
HMO pays a doctor a fixed amount each month to take care of HMO
members, regardless of how much or how little care each member
needs.
Carrier -
Usually a commercial insurer contracted by the Department of Health
and Human Services to process Part B claims payments.
Carry Over Provision
- In major dental policies, allowing an insured who has submitted no
claims during the year to apply any dental expenses incurred in the
last three months of the year toward the new calendar year's
deductible.
Case Management
- The assessment of a person's long term care needs and the
appropriate recommendations for care, monitoring and follow-up as to
the extent and quality of services to be provided.
Case Manager
- A person, usually an experienced professional, who coordinates the
services necessary under the case management approach.
Catastrophe Policy
- This is an older name for Major Dental.
Certificate of Authority (COA)
- Issued by the state, it licenses the
operation of an HMO.
Certificate of Insurance
- Document that summarizes the provisions and benefits of an
insurance contract. May be distributed in booklet form.
Chemical Dependency Services
- The services required in the treatment and diagnosis of chemical
dependency, alcoholism, and drug dependency.
Chemical Equivalents
- Drugs that contain identical amounts of the same ingredients.
Closed Panel
- A situation where covered insureds must select one primary care
dentist. That dentist is the only one allowed to refer the patient
to other dental care providers within the plan. Also called Closed
Panel or Gatekeeper model.
Coinsurance
- The amount you are required to pay for
dental care in a fee-for-service plan or preferred provider
organization (PPO) after you have met your deductible. It is usually
expressed as a percentage of billed charges. For example, if the
insurance company pays 80 percent of the claim, you pay 20 percent.
Commercial Policy
- In Health Insurance, this term originally applied to policy forms
intended for sale to individuals in commerce, as contrasted with
industrial workers. Currently the term is loosely used to mean all
policies that do not guarantee renewability.
Community Rating
- Under this rating system, the charge for insurance to all insureds
depends on the dental and hospital costs in the community or area to
be covered. Individual characteristics of the insureds are not
considered at all.
Composite Rate
- One rate for all members of the group regardless of their status
as single or members of a family.
Comprehensive Major Dental
- A plan of insurance which has a low deductible, high maximum
benefits, and a coinsurance feature. It is a combination of basic
coverage and major dental coverage which has virtually replaced
separate hospital, surgical and dental insurance plans with each having its
own deductible requirements. Also see Major Dental Insurance.
Concurrent Review
- A case management technique which allows insurers to monitor an
insured's hospital stay and to know in advance if there are any
changes in the expected period of confinement and the planned
release date.
Conditional Binding Receipt
- It provides that if a premium accompanies an application, the
coverage will be in force from the date of application or dental
examination, if any, whichever is later, provided the insurer would
have issued the coverage on the basis of the facts revealed on the
application, dental examination and other usual sources of
underwriting information. A Life and Health Insurance policy without
a conditional binding receipt is not effective until it is delivered
to the insured and the premium is paid.
Conditionally Renewable
- A contract that provides that the insured may renew it to a stated
date or an advanced age, subject to the right of the insurer to
decline renewal only under conditions stated in the contract.
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act (COBRA) of 1986 - Legislation
providing for a continuation of group health care benefits under the
group plan for a period of time when benefits would otherwise
terminate. Continuation rights apply to enrolled persons and their
dependents. Coverage may be continued for up to 18 months if the
insured person terminates employment or is no longer eligible.
Coverage may be continued for up to 36 months in nearly all other
cases, such as loss of dependent eligibility because of death of the
enrolled person, divorce, or attainment of the limiting age.
Continuation
- Allows terminated employees to continue
their group dental insurance coverage under certain conditions.
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
- A measure of the average change in prices
over time in a fixed group of goods and services. In this report,
all references to the CPI relate to the CPI for Urban Wage Earners
and Clerical Workers (CPI-W).
Contract Year
- This period runs from the effective date to the expiration date of
the contract.
Conversion Privilege
- Right given to an insured person under a group dental insurance
plans
to change coverage, without evidence of dental insurability, to an
individual policy upon termination of the group coverage. The
conditions under which conversion can be made are defined in the
master policy.
Coordination of Benefits (COB)
- Method of integrating benefits payable under more than one dental
insurance plan so that the insured's benefits from all sources do
not exceed 100 percent of allowable dental expenses or eliminate
incentives to contain costs.
Co-payment
- A specific charge you pay for a specific dental service. For
example, you may pay $10 for an office visit or $5 for a
prescription and the dental plan covers the rest of the dental
charges.
Corridor Deductible
- A Major Dental deductible that provides for a deductible, or
"corridor," after the full payment of basic hospital and dental
expenses up to a stated amount. In the event of further expenses,
payment is on the basis of participation or coinsurance, such as
80%-20% or 85%-15%, and the deductible is that portion paid by the
insured.
Cost Contract
- An agreement between a provider and the Health Care Financing
Administration to provide dental insurance plans services to covered persons based
on reasonable costs for service.
Cost Sharing
- A situation where covered persons pay a portion of the dental
costs such as deductibles, coinsurance, or copayment amounts.
Covered Expenses
- Dental care expenses incurred by an insured or covered person that
qualify for reimbursement under the terms of a policy contract.
Covered Person
- A person who pays premiums into the contract for the benefits
provided and who also meets eligibility requirements.
Creditable Coverage
- The purpose of creditable coverage is to give you credit for prior
health care coverage. You will generally be deemed to have
creditable coverage if your prior health care coverage was under one
of the following:
- A group health plan
- A governmental or church plan
- Health insurance coverage (care under
any hospital or dental service policy or certificate, hospital or
dental service plan contract, or HMO contract)
- Medicare (Parts A and B)
- Medicaid
- CHAMPUS
- A military-sponsored health care program
- A dental care program of the Indian
Health Service or of a tribal organization
- A state health benefits risk pool
- A health program offered under the
Federal Employees Health Benefit Program
- A public health plan, such as one
provided by a state or local governmental political subdivision
- Health benefit plan provided for Peace
Corps members
- Creditable coverage does not
include:
- Coverage only for accidents
- Disability income insurance
- General or auto liability insurance
- Workers' compensation
- Auto dental payment insurance
- Credit-only insurance
How do I show
that I have creditable coverage?
In general, you should receive a
certificate from your current plan or issuer when your coverage
ceases, such as when you leave or change your job. The certificate
should contain information demonstrating that you have creditable
coverage.
If you do not receive a certificate and
your new plan or issuer wants to apply a preexisting condition
exclusion, ask your new plan or issuer to help you get a certificate
from your old plan or issuer. If you still cannot get a certificate,
you can use a variety of evidence to prove creditable coverage.
Acceptable documentation includes: pay stubs that reflect a premium
deduction, explanation of benefit forms (EOBs), a benefit
termination notice from Medicare or Medicaid, and verification by a
doctor or your former health care benefits provider that you had
prior health or dental coverage.
You may request a certificate from your
plan or issuer at any time, free of charge. In fact, you can request
a certificate ahead of time if you know you will be changing jobs.
Generally, a significant break in coverage
is 63 days or more without any creditable coverage. Any coverage
occurring prior to a break in coverage of 63 days would not have to
be credited against a preexisting condition exclusion period. For
example, John Doe had coverage for two years followed by a break in
coverage for 70 days, and then resumed coverage for eight months. He
would receive credit against any preexisting condition exclusion
only for eight months of coverage; no credit would have to be given
for the two years of coverage prior to the break of 63 days or more.