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Understanding Your Dental Insurance
Your dental plan (insurance benefits) is a contract between yourself, the insurance company and your employer, not the dentist. Due to the Privacy Act, we cannot contact your insurance company for information on your behalf. As a patient, the payment for treatment fees is your responsibility.
Most dental plans will not cover 100% of your dentistry. Often, insurance companies will favour certain procedures and less for others due to costs and other factors. Not all treatments are eligible or fully reimbursable. In reality, dental insurance is a partial co-pay plan developed between your employer and a private company. We shall help you understand it, but it bears no resemblance to real insurance such as we enjoy through B.C. Medical Plan.
We offer our patients an estimate of treatment fees to send to your insurance company for confirmation of your dental plan coverage. This will enable you to plan your finances before commencing treatment.
Remember, your dental plan is not a treatment plan. All treatment and care decisions should be made based upon your actual needs as diagnosed by your dentist, independent of your dental plan coverage.
If you have any questions, our team members are qualified to help you!
Insurance Terms You Should Be Aware Of
- Annual Maximum Most insurance companies have an annual maximum amount of coverage for each patient listed under the insurance policy. This coverage may be changed and patients may not be informed.
- Deductible The dollar amount the patient pays toward their treatment total before insurance coverage begins.
- Eligibility Eligibility determines who is covered under the insurance policy.
- Exclusions Many dental services and treatments that are clinically necessary are not covered by dental insurance. These exclusions are usually described in the patient’s insurance booklet, but be aware that more treatments are being excluded to reduce costs to the insuring company.
- Co-Payment “Out of pocket portions” are part of the treatment fee not covered by dental insurance. The insurance company will pay a certain percentage of the treatment but they rarely cover 100%.
- Dual Coverage Both spouses are covered by separate insurance plans. The insurance companies usually coordinate the benefits so that the patient does not receive more than 100% of the cost of treatment.
- Assignment This occurs when a patient signs a section of the insurance form, which allows the dentist to receive payment directly from the insurance company. However, patients are responsible for the “out of pocket portion” at the time of treatment, as well as payment for any treatment that may no longer be a covered expense. Insurance companies now often send payment to the patient. This should be forwarded to the dentist as soon as possible.