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Philadelphia Actuaries Club

Philadelphia Actuaries Club. Pandemics – Past, Present and Future Presented by Annemarie Brownmiller Consulting Services of Princeton, LLC 19 November 2009. Pandemics Past, Present and Future. Definitions History of Pandemics Current Situation Implications of Pandemic

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Philadelphia Actuaries Club

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  1. Philadelphia Actuaries Club Pandemics – Past, Present and Future Presented by Annemarie Brownmiller Consulting Services of Princeton, LLC 19 November 2009

  2. Pandemics Past, Present and Future • Definitions • History of Pandemics • Current Situation • Implications of Pandemic • Modeling Pandemics

  3. Definition of Pandemic • Pandemic: An epidemic (a sudden outbreak) that becomes very widespread and affects a whole region, a continent, or the world • The most common characteristics are: • The ability to cause illness on a global basis • Little or no pre-existing immunity • Potential for serious complications • Virus is new subtype • No vaccines available in the early stages • Influenza pandemic lasts longer than typical flu season

  4. Definition of PandemicInfluenza Viruses • Influenza Viruses • A • Subtype (HxNx) • Strain • Multiple Species • B • Humans Only • C • Mild Illness

  5. Definition of PandemicInfluenza Viruses • Antigenic Drift • Minor change • Same subtype • Antigenic Shift • Major change • New subtype

  6. HistoryofPandemics • History of Pandemics in the 20th century: • 1918 Spanish Flu (most severe) • Infection Rate – close to 35% • Over 40 million deaths in 60 countries • 1957 Asian Flu (moderate) • 2 million deaths • 1968 Hong Kong (mildest) • 1 million deaths

  7. Learning from the PastSARS SARS infected over 8,000 people in 25 countries resulting in almost 800 deaths Cost to global economy - $40 billion* Transported by air travel *Roche, CDC

  8. World Health OrganizationPhases of Pandemic Alert

  9. 21st Century Pandemic Threats H5N1 (Avian) Influenza • H5N1 virus first identified in 2003 • 442 reported cases through 9/24/2009 and 262 deaths • H5N1 is still a serious concern with the potential to cause a deadly pandemic.

  10. 21st Century Pandemic ThreatsNovel 2009 H1N1 (Swine) Influenza • What is Swine Flu? • Morbidity • Mortality • April 24, 2009 • The World Health Organization reported 7 confirmed cases of H1N1 in the United States. • June 11, 2009 • The World Health Organization declares a global pandemic of the novel 2009 H1N1 (Swine Flu).

  11. Current Pandemic Statistics Novel H1N1 2009 (Swine) Influenza • CDC estimates of 2009 H1N1 Cases and Related Hospitalizations and Deaths from April – October 17, 2009 by Age Group (mid-level estimates)

  12. Current Pandemic StatisticsInfluenza (Including Novel 2009 H1N1) Source – CDC FluView as of Week 43

  13. Implications of Pandemic Risks to Manage • Economic • Business Continuity • Claims Surge

  14. Risks to ManageEconomic • Global recession • Asset values • Liquidity risk

  15. Risks to ManageBusiness Continuity • Employee absenteeism • How do we continue operations when up to 30% of work force is absent • In addition to sick employees, absenteeism results form sick family members along with the ‘worried well’. • Disruption of infrastructure • Flexibility • Travel Policies

  16. Risks to ManageBusiness Continuity • Health Insurer • Demand for services • Impact on revenue and reserves • Supply chain • Computer • Plan benefits • Communication

  17. Risks to ManageClaims Surge • Health Insurance Claims • Disability Claims • Workers Compensation • Life Insurance Claims

  18. Modeling Pandemic ImpactHealth Insurance Pandemic Model • Input • Assumptions • Scenarios • Output Estimated excess claims due to pandemic Number of Claims Estimated excess claims due to pandemic Claim Cost Estimated excess claims due to pandemic Limited by Capacity

  19. Input to Model Exposure Duration Pandemic Waves Modeling Pandemic ImpactHealth Insurance

  20. Modeling Pandemic ImpactHealth Insurance • Occupancy and Surge capacity • Hospital bed staffing • Occupancy rate • Surge capacity • Critical care beds • Ventilator capacity

  21. Modeling Pandemic ImpactHealth Insurance • Utilization • Level of care • Length of Stay • Outpatient Visits

  22. Modeling Pandemic Impact Health Insurance • Cost Estimates • Inpatient • Non-ICU • ICU • Ventilator Dependent • Outpatient • Physician Visits • RX Cost of Antiviral

  23. Modeling Pandemic ImpactHealth Insurance • Assumptions • Infection Rate • The attack rate of an influenza virus determines the percent of the population that becomes infected • Attack rates can vary by age with illness among school age children tending to be highest

  24. Modeling Pandemic ImpactHealth Insurance • Assumptions • Hospitalization rates • Age • Underlying health status • Scenarios • Mild Pandemic (1968 – Hong Kong Flu) • Moderate Pandemic (1957 – Asian Flu) • Severe Pandemic (1918 – Spanish Flu)

  25. Modeling Pandemic ImpactHealth Insurance • Output • Number and cost of hospital admits • Non-ICU admits • ICU Admits • Ventilator Admits • Number and cost of outpatient visits • Capacity limits • Hospital surge capacity • Provider surge capacity

  26. Pandemic Projections * Source – Swine origin influenza A (H1N1) virus and ICU Capacity in the US: Are we prepared? Authors: Marya D. Zilberberg, Christian Sandrock, and Andrew Shorr

  27. Pandemic Projections * Source – Swine origin influenza A (H1N1) virus and ICU Capacity in the US: Are we prepared? Authors: Marya D. Zilberberg, Christian Sandrock, and Andrew Shorr ** CSP Model Using 15% attack rate and most likely assumptions for a moderate pandemic

  28. Fighting the Virus • Vaccines • Development time • Prioritization for vaccine distribution • Populations at risk for complications • Health care and public service • Transmission impact

  29. Fighting the Virus Safety of H1N1 vs. Seasonal Flu Vaccine Very Safe Generally for Most People to Take Very Safe for Children 6 Months to 2 Years to Take Very Safe for Pregnant Women to Take Harvard Opinion Research Program, Harvard School of Public Health, September 14-20, 2009.

  30. Fighting the Virus Antiviral Medications Reduce the severity of influenza symptoms Lessen the risk of getting influenza Make people less contagious

  31. Pandemics Yesterday vs. Today • Better drugs • Coordinated response • Healthier population • Global networks • Global travel • Population • Size • Density • AIDS

  32. PandemicsPast, Present and Future • Review of pandemics • Implications for insurance company • Model insurance exposure

  33. Questions? Questions? Thank you!

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