The Initial Coverage Limit is the measured by the retail cost of your drug purchases and is used to determine when you leave your Medicare plan's Initial Coverage Phase and enter the Donut Hole or Coverage Gap portion of your Medicare Part D prescription drug plan.
For example, if you purchase a medication with a retail cost of $100 and your Medicare Part D plan pays $70 toward the prescription and you pay a $30 co-payment, the total retail value of $100 counts toward meeting your Initial Coverage Limit and moves you $100 closer to entering the Donut Hole.
The standard Initial Coverage Limit (entry point to the Coverage Gap or Donut Hole) can vary each year.
In 2006, at the start of the Medicare Part D program, the Initial Coverage Limit was $2,250 and now the ICL has increased in 2019 to $3,820.
Hopefully that helps you out
To make healthy food choices, you need to know which nutrients your body requires.
Answers: healthy, choices
Answer:
stimulus generalization
Explanation:
In stimulus generalization, a stimulus acquires control over a response due to reinforcement in the presence of a similar but different stimulus. Frequently, generalization depends on elements common to two or more stimuli. An example of stimulus generalization is what is happening to Anya. When Anya drank orange juice (stimulation) she felt sick (response), so when she saw grapefruit juice, which is a stimulus very similar to orange juice, she felt sick.
Answer:
Tonsils maybe.............