Answer:
A. pre-authorization
Explanation:
Is it an authorization or a precertification?
Per Healthcare.gov, a decision by your health insurer or plan that a health care service, treatment plan, prescription drug or durable medical equipment is medically necessary. Sometimes called prior authorization, prior approval or precertification. Your health insurance or plan may require preauthorization for certain services before you receive them, except in an emergency. Preauthorization isn’t a promise your health insurance or plan will cover the cost. This concept is not the easiest to understand. It would make sense that a notification and “approval” from an insurance company would then mean services will be paid. This is not the case and is precisely where the predetermination of benefits come into play, in addition to understanding reimbursement policies set up by payers themselves.
Whoever wrote this question loves math, hahaha.
Start by converting 77# to kg, which is 34.9kg
The medication dose is 3 mg/kg, so 3 x 34.9 = 104.7 mg.
Rounding up, that’s 105 mg, and the medication comes in 105mg/5 mL, so they would get 5 mL.
If you’re not allowed to round, you’ll get 4.985 mL, and you’re not going to have the ability to accurately micromeasure like that with an oral medication.
Answer:
loss of mobility in extremities
my grandfather has MS and i have seen the progression of the disease firsthand.
please mark me brainliest!
A copay is a common form of cost-sharing under many insurance plans. Copays are a fixed fee you pay when you receive covered care like an office visit or pick up prescription drugs.
A deductible is the amount of money you must pay out-of-pocket toward covered benefits before your health insurance company starts paying.