Uncompensated care definition
Uncompensated care means health care services provided by a home nursing care or home care provider for which the home nursing care or home care provider does not and has not expected payment and which health care services are not recognized as either a receivable or as revenue in the home nursing care or home care provider's financial statements.
Uncompensated care means care provided by a trauma physician OR A TRAUMA HEALTH CARE PRACTITIONER to a trauma patient on the State trauma registry who:
Uncompensated care means a combination of free care, which the hospital
Examples of Uncompensated care in a sentence
Uncompensated care pool restricted to charity care for uninsured and underinsured, aligned with CMS uncompensated care pool policy as applied in other states (UCC – uninsured care).
Uncompensated care includes charity care for the uninsured but does not include uncompensated care for insured individuals, bad debt, or Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) shortfall.
Uncompensated care includes charity care for the uninsured but does not include uncompensated care for insured individuals, bad debt, or Medicaid and CHIP shortfall.
Uncompensated care is defined as all cases in which the actual payment to Hospital for its services to patients is less than the payment anticipated to be received by Hospital.
More Definitions of Uncompensated care
Uncompensated care means care provided by a trauma
Uncompensated care means bad debt and charity care.
Uncompensated care means a combination of free care, which the hospital provides at no cost to the patient, bad debt, which the hospital bills for but does not collect, and less than full Medicaid reimbursement amounts.
Uncompensated care means either:
Uncompensated care means “Uncompensated care”as defined in section 19a-659 of the Connecticut General Statutes;
Uncompensated care means “uncompensated care” as defined in section 19a-659 of the Connecticut General Statutes;
Uncompensated care means the total amount of charity care and bad debts determined by using the hospital's published charges and consistent with the hospital's policies regarding charity care and bad debts which [have been approved by, and] are on file at [,] the office;