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  2. Copayment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copayment

    A copayment or copay (called a gap in Australian English) is a fixed amount for a covered service, paid by a patient to the provider of service before receiving the service. It may be defined in an insurance policy and paid by an insured person each time a medical service is accessed.

  3. Compensation (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compensation_(psychology)

    In psychology, compensation is a strategy whereby one covers up, consciously or unconsciously, weaknesses, frustrations, desires, or feelings of inadequacy or incompetence in one life area through the gratification or (drive towards) excellence in another area. Compensation can cover up either real or imagined deficiencies and personal or ...

  4. Pain of paying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain_of_paying

    The pain of paying is a concept from Behavioral Economics and Behavioral Science, coined in 1996 by Ofer Zellermayer, whilst writing his PhD dissertation at the University of Carnegie Mellon, under supervision of George Loewenstein.

  5. Medicare Plan G Pros and Cons for 2025 - AOL

    www.aol.com/medicare-plan-g-pros-cons-164918569.html

    Plan G covers Part A deductibles, coinsurance, copayments, and 100% of doctor charges that Medicare does not pay. There are two types of Plan G: regular and high deductible. High deductible Plan G ...

  6. Social compensation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_compensation

    Williams and Karau conducted three experiments addressing both social loafing and social compensation, with the first experiment focused on trust. [1] Participants were pretested on interpersonal trust using Rotter's Interpersonal trust scale [2] then completed a generation task in which participants were to come up with as many uses for a pair of scissors as possible.

  7. Mental Health Parity Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_Health_Parity_Act

    The Mental Health Parity Act (MHPA) is legislation signed into United States law on September 26, 1996 that requires annual or lifetime dollar limits on mental health benefits to be no lower than any such dollar limits for medical and surgical benefits offered by a group health plan or health insurance issuer offering coverage in connection with a group health plan. [1]

  8. Co-pay card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Co-pay_card

    The co-pay card appeared in 2005 as a means by which pharmaceutical marketers could, by offering an instantaneous rebate to patients, combat their challenges to prescription pharmaceuticals, including generic competition, lack of patient compliance and persistency, and an access to the physician population.

  9. Affordance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affordance

    Gibson's is the prevalent definition in cognitive psychology. According to Gibson, humans tend to alter and modify their environment so as to change its affordances to better suit them. In his view, humans change the environment to make it easier to live in (even if making it harder for other animals to live in it): to keep warm, to see at ...