Title: Current Concepts in Underwriting Disability
1Current Concepts in Underwriting Disability
2Attribution
- Material attributed to
- Brackenridge Medical Selection of Life Risks,
5th Ed. - is reproduced by permission of Palgrave
macmillan.
3Historical Background
- With us, the poor is divided into three sorts, so
that some are poor by impotency, as the diseased
person that is judged to be incurable the
second are poor by casualty as the wounded
soldier the third consisteth of the thriftless
poor as the rioter that hath consumed all - For the first two sorts, which are the poor
indeed, there is order taken throughout every
parish in the realm, that weekly collection shall
be made for their help and sustentation -
- William Harrison, Description of England, 1587
4- 1600s first contract of life insurance,
England - 1830s legislation protects injured railroad
workers and passengers, Germany - 1860s first disability provision in a life
insurance contract, United States - 1880s compulsory Workingmens
Compensation, England - 1900 stand alone commercial disability
contracts become common
5Actuarial Risk Assessment
- Paradoxically, the same qualities that make
mortality an unpredictable individual behavior
also make it a highly predictable group behavior. -
- from Medical Selection of Life Risks, 5th Ed.
Chapter 9
6Insurable Risk
- The population at risk must be large, the
incidence low, the loss definite, and difficult
to predict or control. -
- Medical Selection of Life Risks, 5th Ed.,
Chapter 9
7From Income Continuance to Lifestyle
Continuance Weida, BJ The ABCs of Medically
Underwriting Individual Disability Income,
Journal of Insurance Medicine, 1988 20 30-34
- 1860s Low benefits, short benefit period,
confined to accident, house confinement
required - 1960s 60 of own occupation income to age 65
years
8Concepts of Disability
- Impairment any loss of structure or function.
- Disability any restriction or lack (resulting
from an impairment) of ability to perform an
activity in the range considered normal for a
human being. - Handicap a disadvantageresulting from an
impairment that limits or prevents fulfillment
of a (societal) role - WHO ICIDH, 1980
9The Americans with Disabilities Act
- Disability
- A physical or mental impairment that
substantially limits one or more of the major
life activities, or has a record of such an
impairment, or is regarded as having such an
impairment, even when no impairment exists
10Legal Environment
- Unilateral Contract
- When one party makes no express promise, the
contract is called uni-lateral. - adapted from Blacks Law Dictionary
- Ambiguity is usually construed against the
issuer.
11Treating Physician Rule (US Social Security
Disability)
- The treating source's opinion on the subject of
medical disability is binding on the factfinder
unless contradicted by substantial evidence.
12Symptom-based Conditions
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- New fatigue for 6 months causing a 50 decrease
in activity - Conditions that may produce fatigue clinically
excluded - Holmes GP, et al. CFS A Working
Case Definition Ann Int Med 1988 108 387-389 - Fibromyalgia
- Widespread pain (axial upper/lower extremity
right/left) - Eleven or more of 18 specific tender sites
- Wolfe F, et al. Criteria for
Fibromyalgia Arthritis and Rheum. 1990 32(2)
160-172
13Subjective Health Complaints
- This is not to imply that subjective health
complaints are minor. They now seem to be
causing as much or even more suffering and
disability than organic medical conditions.
(emphasis added) - from Waddell G. Models of Disability Using Low
Back Pain as an Example, The RSM Press, 2002 - also Waddell, Aylward, et al. Back Pain,
Incapacity for Work and Social Security Benefits
an international literature review and analysis,
The RSM Press, 2002
14The Disability Paradox
- 1970s people with severe impairments report
their quality of life is better than those around
them expect - 1990s applicants increasingly report
deterioration in quality of life due to symptoms
with little or no impairment
15Accelerating Absence US Soc. Security
Medical Selection of Life Risks, 5th Ed., Chapter
9
16Absence v. Economy (temporal) US Commercial
Medical Selection of Life Risks, 5th Ed.,
Chapter 9
17Absence v. Economy (geographic) UK IB
Medical Selection of Life Risks, 5th Ed.,
Chapter 9
18Limitations of Activity by Age
- 65 In the United States 2005 (p 55)
- US Census Bureau, W. He, et al.
- accessed at www.census.gov/prod/2006pubs/p23-209
.pdf
19Reported Disability, 65 in the US
- 65 In the United States 2005 (p 62) US Census
Bureau, W. He, et al. - accessed at www.census.gov/prod/2006pubs/p23-209
.pdf
2065 in the US 2005
- Selected references
- Freedman VA, et al. Recent Trends In Disability
and Functioning Among Older Adults in the United
States A Systematic Review JAMA, 2002 288(24)
3137 3146 - Several Measures of old age disability and
limitations have shown improvements in the last
decade. Research into the causes of these
improvements is needed - ? Partly due to varying criteria across
studies - ? Partly due to the difficulty in
assessing educational and societal influences
across sub-populations
2165 in the US 2005
- Selected references
- Manton KG, et al. Active Life expectancy
Estimates for the US Eldely Population a
Multidimentional Continuous-Mixture Model of
Functional Change Applied to Cohorts, 182 1996
Demography 2000 37(3) 253 265 - the completed-cohort ALE estimates count the
partial functional capacity of individuals at
each age and allows for recovery from disabled to
active states. These findings suggest that the
overall population burden of chronic disability
in the elderly U.S. populations may be smaller
than previously estimated. - ? From questionnaires of 65 sub-population
(self-report) - ? Active life expectancy (ALE) assess
impairment of ADL and IADL
22Compression of Morbidity
- Another possible external cause of for the rising
health care costs is the aging of the populations
of developed nations. - (However) while life expectancy is increasing,
the number of years of disability is lessening - Bodenheimer T High and Rising Health Care Costs.
Part 1, Seeking an Explanation. Annals of Int
Med, 2005 142(10) 847-854
23Delayed Recovery
- One hundred consecutive back pain claimants were
identified from a single office of New Zealands
sole accident compensation insurer The study
end point was case closure in the subsequent 12
months. - The variable most strongly associated with
case non-closure was whether the claimant was
receiving earnings-related compensation - McNaughton HK, Sims A, et al. Prognosis for
People with Back Pain under a No Fault 24-Hour
Compensation Scheme. Spine 25(10) 1254-1258
(2000).
24Absence v. Economy (geographic) UK IB
Medical Selection of Life Risks, 5th Ed.,
Chapter 9
25Growth in Sickness Absence
- Population 1 prevalence stable or declining,
objective impairment, medically predictable
recovery - Population 2 prevalence climbing with cyclical
variance, subjective health complaints, delayed
or non-recovery
26Classical Disability Underwriting
- Underwriting tools, pricing and regulation are
directed at classic, pathophysiologic (or
objective) medical conditions. - Controversial, subjective, or self-reported
conditions are not addressed by this model.
27Are there reliable predictors of
Controversial Conditions ?
- Hotopf M, et al. Brit Jour Psychiatry 1998 173
268 74 - A psychiatric diagnosis increased symptom
reporting - McBeth J, et al. Arthritis and Rheumatism, 2001
44(4) 940 946 - Somatization is a risk for future widespread
pain - Applegate KL, et al. Journal of Pain, 2005 6(2)
92 97 - MMPI-2 testing showing somatoform
tendencies may predict chronic pain
conditions - (30 year follow up of 2, 332 subjects)
28The Floor and Ceiling of Claim Incidence
- Therefore, classic underwriting procedures can
establish a medical floor under which
disability claim incidence is unlikely to fall. - However, the variable ceiling of claim
incidence is the result of non-medical factors
that are still poorly defined at underwriting
and during the benefits risk management
process.
29Whats a poor Underwriter to do?
- Dont forget the basics!
- The core of risk management is still the
traditional underwriting of classic medical and
psychiatric conditions.
30Be alert to undefined risk
- controversial, subjective, or self-reported
conditions often cannot be underwritten because
they will not manifest for many years.
31Adapt old tools to new circumstances
- Apply underwriting tools that classically protect
against undefined risk - Decline
- Ratings
- Elimination periods
- Benefit periods
- (Consistent with your companys regulatory,
marketing, sales, and underwriting framework.)
32Address the Wider Context
- Work with your underwriting committee to
- Define a workable approach to undefined, excess
risk - Adjust pricing
- Refine policy language to reflect the regulatory
and legal climate - Recognize the limits of post-sales risk
management - Educate medical and lay Underwriters in
somatoform presentations in the absence of a
psychiatric diagnosis - ? Educate the medical community, regulators
and legislators about the practical effect
of medicalizing non-medical conditions.