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In the United States, a third-party administrator (TPA) is an organization that processes insurance claims or certain aspects of employee benefit plans for a separate entity. [1] It is also a term used to define organizations within the insurance industry which administer other services such as underwriting and customer service.
Under Section 80D of the Income-tax Act the insured person who takes out the policy can claim for tax deductions. [12] The types of health insurance plans that are eligible for deduction under this section are individual health insurance policies, family floaters, top-up plans, super top-up plans, and hospital cash policies.
Reimbursement is the act of compensating someone for an out-of-pocket expense by giving them an amount of money equal to what was spent. [1]Companies, governments and nonprofit organizations may compensate their employees or officers for necessary and reasonable expenses; under US [2] [3] law, these expenses may be deducted from taxes by the organization and treated as untaxed income for the ...
“ERISA reimbursement” claims began arising in the late 1980s and have been resisted by some federal courts. [ 5 ] According to industry statistics, ERISA plans and related insurers are collecting close to $1 billion per year through the seizure of tort recoveries or other contractual payments received by insured personal injury victims. [ 6 ]
It was established as Raksha Shakti University in 2009 by the Government of Gujarat, lead by the then Chief Minister Narendra Modi. [5] [7] The university was set up to provide youth with better academic qualifications in the fields of counter-terrorism, counter-insurgency, internal security, police science, forensic science and cyber security. [8]
Raksha, a 1982 Hindi action film; Raksha, a 2008 Telugu horror film; Rakshas, a 2018 Marathi fantasy film; Racha, a 2012 Telugu film release in Hindi as Raksha; Raksha (The Jungle Book), a character from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book
Below is a non-exhaustive list of Rakshasas, a race of anthropomorphic spirits in Indian mythology.While many are malevolent, some are benevolent protectors of Dharma. ...
Brahmā, in a form composed of the quality of foulness, produced hunger, of whom anger was born: and the god put forth in darkness beings emaciate with hunger, of hideous aspects, and with long beards. Those beings hastened to the deity. Such of them as exclaimed, “Oh preserve us!” were thence called Rākṣasas. [5]