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Waiving a Patient Copayment? You
Must Let Us Know
Dentists must legibly and
conspicuously disclose their intention to
waive a patient’s copayment responsibility
on the face of each paper claim form or in the
notes/remarks sections of electronic claims submitted
to a third-party payer.
If dentists do not indicate on the face of the
claim form, or in the notes field of the electronic
claim, their intention to waive all or part of
their patients’ copayment, they are inaccurately
reporting their actual fee.
Submitting a higher fee to Delta Dental of New
Jersey (or any insurance company) than is charged
to and intended to be collected from the patient
is not permissible; it incorrectly states the dentist’s
actual fee. The dentist signature box of a dental
claim form states in part,
“…the fees submitted are the actual
fees I have charged and intend to collect for those
procedures.”
Additionally, courts have concluded that failure
to disclose waiver of copayment is fraudulent.
New Jersey and Connecticut law requires the disclosure
of an intention to waive a patient’s copayment
responsibility.
Undisclosed waiver of the patient’s copayment
responsibility is one of the unacceptable billing
practices reviewed during the claim verification
process. Undisclosed waiver can result in overpayments
that are recoverable by Delta Dental.
For more information, please refer to:
- New Jersey State Board of Dentistry, Administrative
Code [NJAC 13:30-8.10].
- General Statutes of Connecticut [Volume 7,
Title 20, Chapter 379 Sec. 20-114].
- Delta Dental of New Jersey Participation Agreement.
- Delta Dental of New Jersey Dentist Handbook
for Participating Dentists, Chapter 11,
Claim Verifications (Common Claim Discrepancies
#2).
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