If you want to discontinue treating a patient, you must give them 30 days notice by certified mail! If you don't notify them by certified mail, you can't drop them as a patient. I actually took some medical assistant classes awhile ago, and I learned that doctors offices have to send certified mail sometimes! I mean, if they don't have the guts to propose to me in person, they're probably not husband material!Īnyway, certified mail is useful for a lot of other (non-romantic) stuff. I personally would not! I think that I will require an in-person proposal before I will agree to marry someone. January 28, - I'm glad your brothers girlfriend enjoyed being proposed to by USPS certified mail. If you get a tracking number and a receipt once the person gets the letter, you will definitely know when the person gets your correspondence!
#TRACKING NUMBER ON CERTIFIED MAIL RECEIPT HOW TO#
I was wondering how to track certified mail, and the article make it seem pretty easy. I've never personally sent or received certified mail, but I'm looking into sending something using certified mail soon. I had no idea that there was a specific procedure to follow if a doctors office wanted to drop a patient. It seems more official, and then there would be no way they could say they didn't receive it! For instance, if someone was really overdue in paying you, you could send them a bill by certified mail. I assume this same thing could be beneficial in a lot of other businesses too. In the example the article gave, an eviction, you would have proof that you gave your tenant the proper notice. Not necessarily the actual person listed?Ĭertified mail return receipt requested sounds like a great way to protect yourself if you're a business owner. Wouldn't this type of receipt only prove that "somebody" at the "designated address" signed for the docs. When sending something certified, if the person receiving the mail is not home when it is delivered, how many times does the post office try to deliver it before it is returned to the sender?