Sometimes a patient will have more than one health insurance policy. This could
be a patient with Medicare and Medicaid. Medicaid is usually the health care
benefit that is billed last. The patient could have Medicare and coverage under the
Veterans Administration. The patient could be covered under health care provided
as a benefit of employment through their own employer or through their spouses
employer. If so, the two insurance companies are required to determine which
policy is primary or which is secondary. Cob also includes other factors such as
birthdate of parents who is providing healthcare to a child. Some states have laws
regulating coordination of benefits.
627.4235 Coordination of benefits.--
(1) A group hospital, medical, or surgical expense policy, group health care
services plan, or group-type self-insurance plan that provides protection or
insurance against hospital, medical, or surgical expenses delivered or issued for
delivery in this state must contain a provision for coordinating its benefits with any
similar benefits provided by any other group hospital, medical, or surgical expense
policy, any group health care services plan, or any group-type self-insurance plan
that provides protection or insurance against hospital, medical, or surgical
expenses for the same loss.
(2) A hospital, medical, or surgical expense policy, health care services plan, or
self-insurance plan that provides protection or insurance against hospital,
medical, or surgical expenses issued in this state or issued for delivery in this
state may contain a provision whereby the insurer may reduce or refuse to pay
benefits otherwise payable thereunder solely on account of the existence of
similar benefits provided under insurance policies issued by the same or another
insurer, health care services plan, or self-insurance plan which provides
protection or insurance against hospital, medical, or surgical expenses only if, as
a condition of coordinating benefits with another insurer, the insurers together
pay 100 percent of the total reasonable expenses actually incurred of the type of
expense within the benefits described in the policies and presented to the insurer
for payment.
(3) The standards provided in subsection (2) apply to coordination of benefits
payable under Medicare, Title XVIII of the Social Security Act.
(4) If a claim is submitted in accordance with any group hospital, medical, or
surgical expense policy, or in accordance with any group health care service plan
or group-type self-insurance plan, that provides protection, insurance, or
indemnity against hospital, medical, or surgical expenses, and the policy or any
other document that provides coverage includes a coordination-of-benefits
provision and the claim involves another policy or plan which has a coordinationof-benefits
provision, the following rules determine the order in which benefits
under the respective health policies or plans will be determined:
(a)1. The benefits of a policy or plan which covers the person as an employee,
member, or subscriber, other than as a dependent, are determined before those of
the policy or plan which covers the person as a dependent.
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