1 / 22

AGENDA

AGENDA. WHAT : The characteristics of current day Auto Injury Coverges,1 st and 3 rd Party Why : The Determinants of a Total Compensation Settlement How : The Negotiation System to Settle 3 rd Party Injury Claims. Auto Injury Issues .

lindsay
Download Presentation

AGENDA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AGENDA WHAT: The characteristics of current day Auto Injury Coverges,1st and 3rd Party Why: The Determinants of a Total Compensation Settlement How: The Negotiation System to Settle 3rd Party Injury Claims

  2. Auto Injury Issues • IRC Studies (1977+, latest 2002 CY) • AIB Studies (1986+, latest 1996 AY) • Medicals Dominate • Injury & Treatment Types • General Damages (Pain & Suffering) • Claim Investigation • Suspicion of Fraud and Build-Up

  3. WHY • Special (Claimed) and General Damages • Economic and Non-Economic Damages • Circumstances of The Claim • Attorneys • Fraud and Build-Up

  4. BI Settlement Issues • Investigation • Suspicion of Fraud and Build-up • Settlement Negotiation • Low Impact Collision • Passengers • Bad Faith • Evolution Over Time

  5. Injury Type Changes

  6. Total Claimed Medical Charges by Type of Service

  7. General Damages • Special Damages are Claimant Economic Losses • Medical Bills • Wage Loss • Other Economic • General Damages are Residual of Negotiated Settlement Less Specials • “Three Times Specials” is a Myth

  8. Settlement Modeling • Major Claim Characteristics • Tobit Regression for Censored Data (right censored for policy limits) • Evaluation Model for Objective “Facts” • Negotiation Model for all Other “Facts”, including suspicion of fraud or build-up

  9. Evaluation Variables Prior Tobit Model (1993AY) • Claimed Medicals (+) • Claimed Wages (+) • Fault (+) • Attorney (+18%) • Fracture (+82%) • Serious Visible Injury at Scene (+36%) • Disability Weeks (+10% @ 3 weeks) New Model Additions (1996AY) • Non-Emergency CT/MRI (+31%) • Low Impact Collision (-14%) • Three Claimants in Vehicle (-12%) • Same BI + PIP Co. (-10%) [Passengers -22%]

  10. Negotiation Variables New Model Additions (1996AY) • Atty (1st) Demand Ratio to Specials (+8% @ 6 X Specials) • BI IME No Show (-30%) • BI IME Positive Outcome (-15%) • BI IME Not Requested (-14%) • BI Ten Point Suspicion Score (-12% @ 5.0 Average) • [1993 Build-up Variable (-10%)] • Unknown Disability (+53%) • [93A (Bad Faith) Letter Not Significant] • [In Suit Not Significant] • [SIU Referral (-6%) but Not Significant] • [EUO Not Significant] Note: PIP IME No Show also significantly reduces BI + PIP by discouraging BI claim altogether (-3%).

  11. Total Value of Negotiation Variables

  12. HOW • Negotiation is the Principal Method of Settling Liability Claims • No Real Studies of How the Process Works • Bargaining Models (Nash) may be too Complex for Simple Case – One issue $$.

  13. Table 1

  14. Table 2

  15. Negotiated Settlements • Specials may be Discounted or Ignored • Medicals: Real or Built-up? • Information from Investigation • Independent Medical Exams (IMEs) • Special Investigation (SIU) • Suspicion of Fraud or Build-up

  16. HELP • Anyone willing to study negotiation cooperatively can contribute confidential access to BI claim files. • Text miners are standing by willing to extract non-identified data relevant to negotiations • Experts are standing by to analyze the patterns in the data.

  17. References • Derrig, R.A. [2004],The Settlement Negotiation Process for Automobile Bodily Injury Liability Claims in the Presence of Suspicion of Fraud and Build-Up, Risk Theory Society, NY. • Derrig, R.A. and H.I. Weisberg, [2004], Determinants of Total Compensation for Auto Bodily Injury Liability Under No-Fault: Investigation, Negotiation and the Suspicion of Fraud, Insurance and Risk Management, v 71 (4), pp.663-662. • Derrig, R.A., H.I. Weisberg and Xiu Chen, [1994], Behavioral Factors and Lotteries Under No-Fault with a Monetary Threshold: A Study of Massachusetts Automobile Claims, Journal of Risk and Insurance, 61:2, 245-275. • Ross, Lawrence H. [1980], Settled out of Court, (Chicago, III: Aldine). • Insurance Research Council [2004], Fraud and Build-Up in Auto Injury Claims. Malvern, PA • Insurance Research Council [ 2003], Auto Injury Insurance Claims. Countrywide Patterns in Treatment, Cost, and Compensation, Malvern PA • Abrahamse, A. and Stephen J. Carroll [1999], The Frequency of Excess Claims for Automobile Personal Injuries, Automobile Insurance: Road Safety, New Drivers, Risks, Insurance Fraud and Regulation, Claire Laberge-Nadeau, and Georges Dionne, Eds., Kluwer Academic Publishers, 131-151.

More Related