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- Dec 15, 2006
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I just have a question about the different ways dentists are compensated when out in private practice.
In Canada, the different provinces each release a fee guide that provides the suggested fees for treatment. I assume all the states in the USA work in the same way. Now, not every dentist will be compensated for this full fee depending on what type on insurance the patient may be on etc. I'm just gonna list the different plans I know of and if you guys could just confirm if I have the right idea or correct me. Feel free to add any other systems you know too.
Anyways:
Cash payment directly - Seems ideal since you get the full fee directly from the patient, although not many patients may be able to afford it
Insurance - Is there insurance that goes by the state/provincial fee schedule? Would seem ideal since no cuts to fees. This could come with various deductible or copayments that may make it more or less appealing to patients. The copayment must be collected from the patient, of course, but I hear some dentists do not collect.
This is where I get confused when managed care comes into play...
HMO - I have no idea how this system works. I assume they have their own fee guide which reimburses dentists poorly? I guess dentists can choose to accept it or not, although patients may not be happy. If the insurance company's fee guide would only compensate for 80% of a $75 treament that the state fee guide suggests should cost $100, can the dentist only collect the $15 copayment or go for the $40 from the state fee guide?
PPO - I think for this one dentists sign up with an insurance company that will refer their patient base to you for treatment, but you must accept their lower reimbursement rate. Without signing up you're unlikely to see these patients since they will see another dentists who signed up on the PPO plan.
Anyways, managed care looks like it sucks. I hope you guys can clarify this for me because I am a little bit confused on how dentists are compensated out in private practice. Thanks!
In Canada, the different provinces each release a fee guide that provides the suggested fees for treatment. I assume all the states in the USA work in the same way. Now, not every dentist will be compensated for this full fee depending on what type on insurance the patient may be on etc. I'm just gonna list the different plans I know of and if you guys could just confirm if I have the right idea or correct me. Feel free to add any other systems you know too.
Anyways:
Cash payment directly - Seems ideal since you get the full fee directly from the patient, although not many patients may be able to afford it
Insurance - Is there insurance that goes by the state/provincial fee schedule? Would seem ideal since no cuts to fees. This could come with various deductible or copayments that may make it more or less appealing to patients. The copayment must be collected from the patient, of course, but I hear some dentists do not collect.
This is where I get confused when managed care comes into play...
HMO - I have no idea how this system works. I assume they have their own fee guide which reimburses dentists poorly? I guess dentists can choose to accept it or not, although patients may not be happy. If the insurance company's fee guide would only compensate for 80% of a $75 treament that the state fee guide suggests should cost $100, can the dentist only collect the $15 copayment or go for the $40 from the state fee guide?
PPO - I think for this one dentists sign up with an insurance company that will refer their patient base to you for treatment, but you must accept their lower reimbursement rate. Without signing up you're unlikely to see these patients since they will see another dentists who signed up on the PPO plan.
Anyways, managed care looks like it sucks. I hope you guys can clarify this for me because I am a little bit confused on how dentists are compensated out in private practice. Thanks!