Those services needed by a nursing home resident, but not provided by the nursing home, such as podiatry and dental services. Ancillary services may not be included in the basic rate of the facility.
Generally refers to services not categorized as hospital room and board or services provided by an entity or person other than a hospital or physician. Example: laboratory, durable medical equipment, home health care, ambulance, etc.
Additional generation and transmission services provided by generating units and some types of transmission equipment that are needed to ensure the reliable operation of the transmission system and facilitate power transfers. Some of these services, include: scheduling, system control and dispatch; reactive power supply, voltage support, and voltage control; regulation and frequency control; energy imbalance (short-term load following); standby generation; operating reserves, including spinning and supplemental reserves; compensation for real power or transmission losses; dynamic scheduling of generation in response to fluctuations in specific loads; and restoration of generation service or black start capabilities.
Ancillary Services are additional health services that are provided by an in-patient program or hospital. They may include x-ray, drug and laboratory services.
Services given by a hospital or other inpatient health program, such as x-rays, lab testing, and drug administration.
Health care such as lab and x-rays.
services rendered in connection with inpatient or outpatient care in a hospital or in connection with medical emergency including the following: ambulance, anesthesiology, assistant surgeon, pathology, and radiology. This term also includes services of the attending physician or primary surgeon in the event of a medical emergency.
Services available to a beneficiary other than room, board and surgery, e.g., laboratory, x-ray, drugs, etc.
Services that the Independent System Operator may develop, in cooperation with market participants, to ensure reliability and to support the transmission of energy from generation sites to customer loads. Such services may include: regulation, spinning reserve, non-spinning reserve, replacement reserve, voltage support, and black start.
Special services and items furnished to an institutionalized eligible client, which are separately payable in addition to the daily room and board charge. It may also be categorized as those provided by medical personnel other than physicians.
Dental care services that patients receive from providers other than primary care dentists.
Services, other than those a provider performs, such as laboratory work, x-rays, and anesthesia.
are the power support services provided by a utility in conjunction with transmission service to ensure system reliability and power delivery.
Hospital services exclusive of such services as room and board, dietary, nursing and supplies; some examples are radiology and laboratory services.
Services, charged by a hospital, which are related to a patient's care, but do not include any room and board charges.
Health care services conducted by providers other than physicians and surgeons. These services can include such services as physical therapy and home health care.
Interconnected operations services for operating reserve, voltage control, regulation and frequency response, scheduling and system control and dispatch and other power supply necessary to effect a reliable transfer of electrical energy at specified contract terms between a buyer and a seller.
Health care services that patients receive from providers other than primary care physicians.
Hospital services other than room and board and professional services, such as X-ray, drug and laboratory services.
These are services such as operating reserves, frequency control, voltage control, black-start capability and load following that are needed to properly run an electrical system. The former Ontario Hydro provided all these itself. Now the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) contracts with various suppliers to supply these services.
Supplemental services provided to a person while being treated. Included are laboratory, radiology, physical therapy, etc.
Services routinely available from hospital departments for all patients in the hospital; i.e., routine blood and urine tests, x-rays, medications, etc.
Includes the provision of reactive power, frequency control and load following.
Supplemental hospital services other than room and board (e.g., laboratory tests and x-rays).
Services other than primary-care services, which may include physical, occupational, or speech therapy; radiology; and laboratory services.
Interconnected Operations Services identified by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Order No. 888 issued April 24, 1996) as necessary to effect a transfer of electricity between purchasing and selling entities and which a transmission provider must include in an open access transmission tariff.
supplementary services which may laboratory, radiology, physical therapy, and inhalation therapy that are provided in conjunction with medical or hospital care.
Necessary services that must be provided in the generation and delivery of electricity. As defined by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, they include: coordination and scheduling services (load following, energy imbalance service, control of transmission congestion); automatic generation control (load frequency control and the economic dispatch of plants); contractual agreements (loss compensation service); and support of system integrity and security (reactive power, or spinning and operating reserves).
Those services other than room and board charges, such as laboratory tests, x-rays, therapy, surgery and the like.
Health care services supplied by professionals other than primary care physicians, such as laboratory work, x-rays and anesthesia.
an independent system operator creates a market for buying and selling ancillary services, which help control the flow of electricity and provide energy ‘reservesâ€(tm) to maintain reliability. These services are designed to maintain reliability of power supply to end-users. Ancillary services can include regulation, spinning reserve, non-spinning reserve and replacement reserve.
Services necessary to support transmission of capacity and energy from resources to load while maintaining reliable operation of the transmission system.
Support services and procedures offered in hospitals or outpatient settings. They include x-rays, blood and urine tests, and similar services.
Services necessary to maintain reliable operation of the transmission system during the delivery of power from the marketer to the utility's distribution system. Ancillary services must be offered by the transmission provider to buyers or sellers of retail electricity. Some services may be offered by third parties. Six key ancillary services are identified in the Detroit Edison Open Access Transmission Tariff (OATT): Scheduling, system control and dispatch Reactive supply and voltage control from generation sources Regulation and frequency response Energy imbalance Operating reserve - spinning reserve Operating reserve - supplemental reserve
Auxiliary or supplemental services (i.e. diagnostic services, physical therapy, medications) used to support diagnosis and treatment of a patient's condition.
services, other than those provided by a physician or hospital, which are related to a patient’s care, such as laboratory work, x-rays and anesthesia.
Professional charges for x-ray, laboratory tests, and other similar patient services.
Services that are options or come with an apartment which are above and beyond what you generally get with a rental apartment such as a parking space or health club membership.
Those services that participate in the care of patients principally by assisting and augmenting the talents of attending health care providers in diagnosing and treating human ills. Ancillary services generally do not have primary responsibility for the clinical management of patients.
Services exclusive of room, board and nursing care that supplement the primary care the patient receives, such as drugs, dressings, laboratory services or physical therapy.
The group of cost centers which includes diagnostic or therapeutic services performed by specific departments of the long-term care facility (or under contract) that are not part of the general or routine patient care. Ancillary services are those special services for which charges are customarily made in addition to routine charges and include patient supplies, pharmacy, laboratory, physical therapy, and home health services.
Necessary services that include items such as billing, collection, meter reading, peaking and storage.
Protective shoes, clothing, tools, fees, or other services necessary for work.
Supplemental services provided with medical or hospital care. alance Billing A process whereby the provider bills a patient for the difference between the provider's charge and the amount of payment already received by the provider from a third party payer other than for co-pays, co-insurance or deductibles. apitation A payment plan for health care providers. Under it, a managed-care health organization pays a doctor or other provider a fixed amount to care for a patient for a specific period of time -regardless of the actual cost of treatment or quantity of services provided. It is the payment of a per capita amount for a defined package of health care services. A specific dollar amount per member is paid to providers or organizations of providers.
Additional services provided for a fee during hospital stays, other than room and board charges. Ancillary services may include additional services such as x-rays, anesthesia, and lab work. Ancillary Benefits. Benefits under a policy provided to cover miscellaneous hospital charges.
Services provided by a utility and other suppliers to a provider of generation which maintains the quality. safety loading. accounting and planning necessary to move generation from one point to another.
This means: such services as any authorised electricity operator may be required to have available as Ancillary Services pursuant to the Grid Code; and such services as any authorised electricity operator or person making transfers on External Interconnections may have agreed to have available as being Ancillary Services pursuant to agreement made with National Grid and which may be offered for purchase by National Grid.
These services are used to support the diagnosis or treatment of a patient’s condition. Such services include physical therapy, occupational therapy, home health services, and diagnostic services. Ancillary services are also referred to as “supplemental services.
Auxiliary or supplemental services, such as diagnostic services, home health services, physical therapy and occupational therapy, used to support diagnosis and treatment of a patient's condition.
Services or tariff provisions related to provision of electricity, other than simple generation, transmission or distribution. Ancillary services related to transmission or distribution. Ancillary services related to transmission service include: energy losses, energy imbalances, scheduling and dispatching, load following, system protection and reactive power. Ancillary services related to distribution include meter reading, billing and collections.
Supplemental services, including laboratory, radiology, physical therapy, and inhalation therapy that are provided in conjunction with medical or hospital care.
The Services other than scheduled energy, which are required to maintain system reliability and meet WSCC/NERC operating criteria. Such services include spinning, non-spinning, replacement reserves, regulation (AGC), and voltage control and black start capability. This additional energy can be self-provided by Load Serving Entities (LSE) on behalf of their customers.
All the extras that make that hospital stay special, excluding room, meals and nursing care. Ancillary services can include just about everything else: lab services, drugs, dressings, radiology, operating room services and anesthesiology. Could also cover these same services in a nonhospital setting.
Ancillary services are those services necessary to support the transmission of energy from resources to loads while maintaining, reliable operation of the Transmission Provider's transmission system in accordance with Good Utility Practice.
Supplemental services, including laboratory, radiology, physical therapy, and inhalation therapy that are provided to you along with medical or hospital care.