|
Dual coverage
What is dual coverage?
If you’re fortunate enough
to be covered by two dental plans, you have
what is called dual coverage. Dual coverage
doesn’t mean that your benefits are doubled.
What it does mean is that you will likely enjoy
lower out-of-pocket costs for your dental care.
Dual
coverage works the same way whether you are
covered by two Delta Dental plans or by Delta and
another carrier. Delta Dental simply works with the
other dental carrier to coordinate your benefits.
Who is the primary carrier?
The first or primary carrier
is the one that covers you as a primary enrollee
(e.g., your employer rather than your spouse’s
employer). If you have two jobs, the plan that has covered
you longer is considered primary.
For your children’s coverage,
the primary carrier is generally determined
by the birthday rule: coverage of the parent
whose birthday (month and day, not year) comes
first in the year is considered to be your children’s
primary coverage. The birthday rule may be superseded
by a divorce agreement or other court ruling.
How does dual coverage work?
Suppose, for example,
that both of your plans provide two cleanings
a year, each with 80 percent coverage. The primary
carrier pays 80 percent, and the secondary carrier
usually covers up to the remaining 20 percent
that you would have had to pay out-of-pocket
if covered by only one plan. You would not,
however, be entitled to four cleanings per year.
Why not twice as many benefits?
Why don't you receive
double the benefits when you have two dental
programs, especially if your dentist recommends
that you receive more than two cleanings per
year?
Dual coverage limitations,
like all other program limitations, are built
into your group’s contract and into the rates
your group pays for your coverage. These contracts
are set up to provide affordable dental care
to a maximum number of people. Given the choice
between doubling one individual’s benefits or
providing a greater scope of benefits to more
people in the group, most group purchasers choose
to spread their benefit dollars more evenly.
What if you have non-duplication
of benefits?
For groups with a non-duplication
of benefits rule in their plan, the secondary
carrier pays only the difference between what
the primary carrier actually paid and what the
secondary carrier would have paid if it had
been the primary carrier.
For example, if the primary
carrier paid 80 percent and the secondary carrier
normally covers 80 percent as well, the secondary
carrier would not make any additional payment.
However, if the primary carrier had only paid
50 percent, the secondary carrier would pay
up to the remaining 30 percent.
Dual coverage saves money
for you and your group by sharing the total
cost of dental benefits between two carriers.
Containing costs is an important part of Delta’s
plan to keep you smiling.
Sample coordination of
benefits
| Procedure |
Primary
carrier pays 80% |
Secondary
carrier pays 20% |
Secondary
carrier, under a non-duplication of benefits
clause, where cleanings are covered at 80% |
| Cleaning
$80 |
$64 |
$16 |
$0 |
|