Zoom! Dentistry | Charleston SC | Carolina Family Dentistry | Dr. Ron Banik

(843) 553-0911 8720 North Park Blvd, Suite B | Charleston, SC 29406

Financial and Insurance Information

Financial and Insurance Information

We are happy to discuss fees and payment options before treatment begins.  As a courtesy to our patients we accept assignment from insurance plans and file the appropriate claims and paperwork for you. We work hard to make dental care affordable and to help you to understand insurance benefits and their limitations.

  • We offer a discount if full payment is made at the beginning of treatment so no further bookkeeping fee is needed.  We also offer a senior citizens discount as well (paitents with PPO, HMO plans not eligible-see below).
  • Discounts for patients with reduced fee plan insurance (PPOs, HMOs, etc) are built-in to the insurance plan and have already been made.  Ask our expert financial coordinator for details and for any other application specials and discounts.
  • For you convenience we accept payment by VISA, MasterCard, and Discover.
  • To help fit your budget and help make extensive treatment affordable, we are pleased to offer our patients the CareCredit card, North America's leading patient payment program. CareCredit is the credit card exclusively for healthcare services providing loans for up to 12 months at 0% interest. You will have low monthly payments for healthcare procedures not commonly covered by insurance, including dental procedures. Plus, you can use your card over and over for follow-up appointments. Learn more by visiting CareCredit.com or contacting our office. Ready to apply? Apply online for your CareCredit card today (see link below).  Ask our expert financial coordinator for details.

                                    

INSURANCE AND INSURANCE COVERAGE

If you have insurance, we will help you to determine the coverage you have available. Please note, our commitment is to you and your dental health, not to an insurance company.  You are the policy holder, you have a contract with your insurance company and they have an obligation to you, we only have access to limited information.  As confusing as insurance policies can be, familiarize yourself with your coverage and limitations as well as possible.  We will help in every way we can in filing your claim and handling insurance questions from our office on your behalf.  However, as with any insurance, patients are ultimately responsible for their own costs and payments.

How to understand your dental insurance, maximize your benefits, & avoid common mistakes!

Frequenly Asked Questions

  1. How does dental insurance work? 
    Dental benefits are not really insurance plans. They are agreements to help pay for some of your dental needs. The more your employer pays for coverage, the lower your out-of-pocket costs will be. However, whatever your benefits may be, they are very nice to have.

  2. How are plans different? Most plans have co-payments, deductibles, maximums, and excluded services. Tables 1 & 2 below provide easy explanations and examples of these confusing features.

  3. My plan covers 100%. Perhaps for some services; but never for all. Plus the 100% may be on an artificial fee, rather than what any dentist in your area charges. For example; take an X-ray. A good plan might set coverage at $20, a middle plan at $10 and a low-priced plan may exclude it altogether. Yet all the plans may claim to cover X-rays at 100%.

  4. Can you waive my portion & accept whatever insurance pays? This seems innocent and we'd like to help. However, such acts are considered falsified billing. Carriers audit records for such activity and prosecute violators aggressively.

  5. Can you change codes, or dates, to get me better coverage? Insurance carriers inspect records. Your x-rays, lab slips and chart tell the true story. If fraud is committed, you and your dentist can be fined or imprisoned.
  6. I've reached my maximum in no-time. Is that normal? The $1000 maximum was set 40 years ago. At that time, $1000 was considered a reasonable level of dental coverage each year. Adjusting for inflation, your maximum should be about $5000 today, but employers have sought to keep costs down. Many people need care that far exceeds this $1000 artificial maximum.
  7. My insurance will pay only for a less expensive treatment. Should I get that instead? Insurers commonly pay for the "least expensive alternative treatment. " Many times this is not the smartest or best choice Tables 1 & 2 below prove some examples.
  8. If I don't have coverage, it must not be necessary; right? No. The limitations of your policy are totally arbitrary. They have no relation to the treatment that you need or may want. Remember, your dentist's responsibility is to advise you what treatments are available and what is best for you. Your insurance contract is designed by lawyers and financial experts to control costs.
  9. My carrier said my dentist overcharged me. What should I do? Carriers often call their artificial fees "usual, customary or reasonable." However, these fees are often based more on what premium your employer paid than what any dentist in your area charges. There are virtually no regulations as to how insurers arrive at their reimbursements; and most refuse to release such information. Fees may be out-dated, unrealistic, or based on an inappropriate geographic area.
  10. Why aren't preventive treatments or better alternatives covered? Wouldn't insurers save in the long run? Employers change carriers, on average, every 2 years; so your insurer is not concerned with what happens later. Insurance corporations report profits quarterly. The incentive for them is to save now, not years later.
  11. Why can you only estimate my coverage? Dentists deal with 1000's of plans and 100's of types of treatments each year. Most carriers refuse to release the details of their plans. They change policies and reimbursements constantly and without notice.
  12. Why not send written estimates? Pre-authorizations are rarely required, despite contract language that is designed to suggest otherwise. The process is so long and frustrating that statistically nearly 70% of estimated work never gets done. Plus carriers rarely disclose what the actual dollar reimbursement will be anyway. Most dentists are happy to do them fro you but consider pre-estimates a waste of time.
  13. Coverage seems so unfair. How much is dental insurance? At only about $30-507 month for family coverage, dental benefits can be an excellent bargain. If your plan is disappointing, show your employer this pamphlet They may not be aware of the restrictions and fine-print in the contract they purchased. Sometimes better benefits often only cost a little more.
  14. What if my spouse has insurance? Dental plans used to work together. However, many times you will get little or no coverage from a second plan anymore. Consider any extra benefit an unexpected gift.
  15. Do you take medical insurance? Medical plans do not cover dental services, except for a few situations, such as accidents and some oral surgery.
  16. How do dentists get on the list of "preferred providers"? Providers are screened for malpractice and legal violations; but for the most part all they have to do is agree to accept lower reimbursements/give a discount. The the bigger the discount the harder it can be to devote adequate time to you; or to offer you the latest in quality care. The shorter the list of dentists, the more compromises you may be unknowingly accepting.
  17. How do you handle my insurance? We are happy to process your paperwork for you. To accept insurance, we ask you to keep a credit card on file. Before treatment, we will approximate your coverage and ask for your estimated co-payment. After insurance pays, we will credit or charge your card to reconcile any differences. Whatever your coverage, please remember that you are ultimately responsible for payment.
  18. Why do you collect co-payments automatically? The more paperwork and administration costs we eliminate, the more savings we can pass back to you.
  19. Does dental insurance have to be so complicated? No. Many companies are switching to "direct reimbursement plans" . These are much clearer and simpler and they cut administration costs by 50% or more. Most employers do not know about them. For more information, have them call the American Dental Association at 800-621-8099 Ext 7746.

TABLE 1: How The Fine Print Works-The Roof Analogy

What if the roof on your home was leaking? Here's how "dental insurance" might handle the problem, The following common clauses are hidden in many dental benefit contracts:

  • Least Expensive Alternative: You want better products and workmanship, but insurance pays only for the most basic job. Insurers are not saying you should not get the better work, or denying that it is better; just that they will not pay for it.
  • Bundling: The wood under your roof has rotted & replacement will entail extra costs. Insurance ignores the extra work by "bundling" it into your roof benefit. You must bear the additional expense.
  • Pre-existing condition: Your roof was already damaged before you got insurance. Coverage will be denied.
  • Dental/Medical Necessity: You need a new roof, but your contract's language says that insurance will pay only for a "patch". You must pay the difference.
  • Frequency Limitation: You patch the roof, but it fails 2 years later. Your contract says they will pay once every 5 years. Coverage denied.
  • Fees & Percentages: You have 50% coverage for a new roof. You get several estimates-all in the $4,000 range, yet your carrier's fabricated fee is only $3,000. They will pay 50% of $3,000 ($1,500) , not 50% of the actual cost.
  • Maximum: Your plan has a $1,000 maximum. The most your carrier will pay is $1,000 and that is it; even if that is less than 50% of their fabricated fee.
  • Better Plans: Your neighbor has the same roof, same problem, same carrier but a better insurance plan. They will pay more for his job than for yours.
  • Need Verses Contract Language: Your roof is unusually difficult and costs more. You protest and send a letter to your carrier for a higher reimbursement. Your request will be denied. Coverage is based solely on the legal language in your contract; not on what you need.

TABLE 2: Dental Insurance Terms

Dental insurance provides wonderful benefits. However, there are several confusing provisions in the "fine print" of most contracts. Some common terms to know:

  • Deductible: How much you have to pay before your insurance begins to kick in. (Commonly $50)
  • Maximum: The most you can spend of your insurance company's money each year. (Usually $1,000-$1,500)
  • UCR Fees: The artificial fee made up by your insurance carrier for each dental procedure. When your plan "says" it will pay 80% for a filling, it will pay 80% of this artificial fee, not what any dentist charges. Interestingly, insurers refuse to disclose how they come up with these fees, and there are virtually no regulations governing whether they are fair or even realistic.
  • Categories: Carriers often present percentages based on 3 "categories" of services:

Diagnostic: Exams, X-rays, regular cleanings -usually covered at 80-100% of the insurer's fabricated fee.

Basic: Fillings, some root canals, simple extractions -usually covered at 60-80% of the carrier's assigned fee.

Major: Crowns, bridges, dentures, peiodontal (gum) treatment (deep cleanings), surgical extractions -usually covered at 0-50% of the artificial insurance fee.

  • Exclusions: Dental treatments that are not covered. Common examples include cosmetic services, treatments for gum disease, implants & bite therapy. Over half of all the dental codes are excluded from most contracts.
  • Alternative Benefits: If there are several ways to fix your dental problem, your carrier will pay for the least expensive option, even if you pick better care.
  • Pre-existing conditions: Dental problems you have that existed before your benefits became effective. Treatment may not be covered.

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