Medical expense Plan A pays up to $4,000. Plan B pays up to $3,000. If a person covered under both plans incurs $6,000 in expenses and Plan A is primary, which is true under the coordination of benefits provision?
Plan A pays up to $4,000 and Plan B pays up to $2,000.
When a person covered by two medical expense plans incurs $6,000 in expenses, Plan A, being primary, will pay its maximum limit of $4,000. The remaining $2,000 can then be claimed under Plan B, which covers up to $3,000, allowing it to pay the remaining amount after Plan A's contribution.
Plan A cannot pay $6,000 because its maximum payout limit is $4,000. Even though the total expenses incurred are $6,000, the primary plan only covers up to its specified limit, which is not contingent on the total expenses.
This statement is incorrect as it misrepresents the coordination of benefits. Since Plan A is primary, it pays its maximum limit first, which is $4,000, and Plan B would only pay if there were remaining expenses, which would not apply in this scenario.
This option is misleading because it suggests that Plan A pays a percentage of the costs, which is not applicable in this case. Plan A has a defined maximum payment limit of $4,000 rather than a percentage-based payment system.
This choice accurately reflects the coordination of benefits. Plan A pays its full limit of $4,000 as the primary plan, and then Plan B pays up to the remaining $2,000 of the incurred expenses, aligning perfectly with the total costs of $6,000.
In coordinating benefits between two medical plans, the primary plan's limits dictate the initial payout, while the secondary plan can cover remaining expenses as long as it is within its own limits. In this case, Plan A's $4,000 limit and Plan B's $3,000 limit combine effectively to cover the $6,000 incurred, leading to a total of $4,000 from Plan A and $2,000 from Plan B.
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