deductible
(adjective)
A deductible is the amount that the insured must pay out-of-pocket before the health insurer pays its share.
Examples of deductible in the following topics:
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The Sociological Approach
- They do this through induction and deduction.
- In order to test a theory's validity, they utilize deduction.
- Deduction is the act of evaluating their theories in light of new data.
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Health Insurance
- Some of the essential terms associated with health insurance are premiums, deductibles, co-payments, and explanations of benefits.
- A deductible is the amount that an insured individual must pay out-of-pocket before the health insurer pays its share.
- For example, policyholders might have to pay a $500 deductible per year, before the health insurer covers any health care costs.
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The Role of Government
- In compulsory insurance models, healthcare is financed from some combination of employees' salary deductions, employers' contributions, and possibly additional state funds.
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Piaget
- At this point, the person is capable of hypothetical and deductive reasoning.
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Formulating the Hypothesis
- While there is no single way to develop a hypothesis, a useful hypothesis will use deductive reasoning to make predictions that can be experimentally assessed.
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The Development of Social Science
- This unity of science as descriptive remained, for example, in the time of Thomas Hobbes who argued that deductive reasoning from axioms created a scientific framework; his book, Leviathan, was a scientific description of a political commonwealth.
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Theoretical Perspectives on Childhood Socialization
- This person no longer requires concrete objects to make rational judgements and is capable of hypothetical and deductive reasoning.
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Sociology and Other Social Sciences
- This unity of science as descriptive remained, for example, in the time of Thomas Hobbes, who argued that deductive reasoning from axioms created a scientific framework.
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What is Sociology?
- They gather data and evaluate their theories in light of the data they collect (a.k.a. deduction).
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Quantitative and Qualitative
- Further, quantitative sociologists typically believe in the possibility of scientifically demonstrating causation, and typically utilize analytic deduction (e.g., explore existing findings and deduce potential hypotheses that may be tested in new data).