A B C D E F G H I J K
L M
N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Accident-year basis—The annual accounting period in which
loss events occurred, regardless of when the losses are actually
reported, booked or paid.
Actuary—One who uses statistical analysis to compute
insurance risks and premiums, and to develop financial
forecasts. Such forecasts are based on claims experience, price,
utilization trends, product competition and other societal and
marketplace conditions that affect the company's financial
condition.
Admitted carrier/company—An insurance company authorized
to do business in a certain state. Just because a company is
admitted in a state does not mean that it is allowed to write
business in that state. In order to write business, the company
must also file rates and have them approved by that state's
Department of Insurance. Once a company has a license in a
state, the license remains in effect as long as the company pays
a fee every year to renew it. Synonym: licensed carrier/company.
Adverse selection—An applicant who is a
greater-than-average risk; occurs when policy premium does not
cover cost.
Application—A written statement by a prospective insured
that provides information about the applicant to be used in
determining insurability.
Arbitration—An alternative to a court trial for
resolution of a dispute or claim between two or more parties. In
arbitration, a case is heard and resolved by an arbitrator or a
panel of arbitrators. Arbitration may be entered into by
agreement or may be mandated by statute, and the decision may be
binding or nonbinding. A binding decision cannot be retried in
the courts.
Assessability —A characteristic of some insurance
policies in which policyholders are obliged to pay money, in
addition to premiums, if the insurer experiences losses.
Assets—All the property and financial resources owned by
an insurance company. Nonadmitted assets are assets—such as real
estate (other than home office), furniture and other
equipment—that are not recognized for solvency purposes by state
insurance laws or insurance department regulations.
Assumed premium —Consideration or payment an insurance
company receives for providing reinsurance for another company.
Bodily injury—Defined in the SCPIE policy as "death,
physical injury, sickness or disease sustained by a person."
Broker—A person or company that finds the best insurance
deal for a client and then sells a policy to him or her, usually
for a percentage of the premium. SCPIE deals with numerous
brokers.
Bundling—The practice of grouping several individual
procedures or services together for the purpose of paying for
them as one package.
Capitation—A fixed periodic fee paid to a healthcare
provider by a healthcare carrier for each covered member
eligible to receive healthcare services under the terms of an
HMO-type plan, regardless of how many times the member uses the
service.
Captive insurance company—A wholly owned subsidiary of an
association or group, organized for the purpose of insuring the
risks of the association or group.
Carrier—A synonym for an insurance company.
Claim—A written or oral notice, demand, cross-claim or
lawsuit (including an arbitration proceeding) received by the
insured as a result of an occurrence (see definition). A claim
is "reported" when an insured provides written notice of a claim
to SCPIE.
Claim severity—Refers to the amount of financial
liability resulting from settling a claim. A claim that is
settled with no payment for damages is generally considered to
have a "small" claim severity, while a claim in which SCPIE pays
the full limits of a policy is a "large" severity claim. Trends
in claims severity on a specialty-by-specialty basis are
important factors in setting rates each year.
Claims-made coverage—The most common type of professional
liability coverage available, it provides protection for claims
that occur and are reported while the policy is in effect
(coverage period). Within the conditions of a claims-made
policy, a claim must be reported to the carrier in writing by
the insured. SCPIE was one of the first companies to offer
claims-made coverage, and continues to do so because premiums
are generally less costly than with other coverage types. Tail
coverage, or a Reporting Endorsement, provides coverage for
claims that occur during the coverage period but are reported
after the policy terminates.
Combined Ratio—The sum of the loss ratio and the expense
ratio expressed as a percentage. Generally, a combined ratio
below 100% indicates an underwriting profit, above 100% an
underwriting loss.
Commercial carrier—A for-profit insurance company, also
known as a traditional or traditional line company. It is
regulated by state laws and must qualify financially to do
business in a state.
Composite rate—A composite rate is a unique component of
claims-made insurance coverage. Composite rates are used by
actuaries to calculate premiums in specific cases in which the
future claims risk has been significantly reduced or increased.
One example of SCPIE's applying a composite rate is that of a
doctor who changes his or her practice from full-time to
part-time status. SCPIE offers a 50% discount on premiums for
eligible part-time physicians. However, the full discount does
not take effect immediately upon conducting reduced practice
hours. Initially, the part-time discounted premium is a
composite rate based on the likelihood of claims not yet
reported, but that stems from both past and present risk
exposures. This composite rate is based on both the length of
time that the physician practiced full time and the length of
time spent in part-time practice. In claims-made coverage,
composite rating is necessary to ensure that sufficient premiums
are reserved for the higher full-time (past) exposure as well as
for the part-time exposure (current). The composite rate will
continue for five years, with a gradually larger discount each
year, until the full 50% part-time discount is reached.
Composite rates are also applicable in cases of change of
specialty and practice location.
Cost containment—Programs designed to help control
healthcare costs by encouraging the use of the most
cost-effective medical services and by discouraging unnecessary
medical services.
Coverage exclusions—Each coverage in a policy has an
exclusion section that describes the circumstances under which
coverage of the physician, entity or other insured, will not be
applicable. For example, all SCPIE policies contain coverage
exclusions for criminal acts and fee disputes.
Credentialing—The granting of medical staff membership
and specific privileges to a physician by a hospital governing
body and medical staff.
Declarations insert—Also referred to as a "face sheet" or
"dec page," this is a prominent part of the policy. The
declarations insert is provided with a SCPIE policy as the top
or cover page to the policy booklet. This "dec page" specifies
the name or names of insured members, describes the covered
activity or activities and lists the following:
- the policy number
- coverage limits
- policy period — dates when the policy becomes effective
and when it terminates
- a retroactive date if coverage became effective prior to
the current policy period
- the policyholder's premium paid or due
- any nonstandard coverages provided, such as excess
personal liability or any special policy endorsements.
Deductible—The amount of the loss the insured is
responsible to pay before benefits from the insurance company
are payable.
Definitions section—A section in a SCPIE policy booklet
defining specific words and phrases used in the policy. For
example, in the SCPIE policy for individual physicians, the
definitions section is the first section in the policy booklet.
Direct writer—An insurer that sells policies through
salaried employees instead of through independent agents or
brokers.
Discovery—Pretrial procedures to learn of evidence in the
possession of, or known to, an opposing party or witnesses.
Discovery is designed primarily to minimize the element of
surprise at the time of trial.
Earned premium—The portion of a premium that has paid for
(earned) coverage, as opposed to the portion of a premium that
will pay for (unearned) coverage. A quarterly premium paid in
January will have two months of earned premium on February 28,
and one month of unearned premium still remaining.
Expense Ratio —Incurred expenses (e.g., policy
acquisition costs and other underwriting expenses) divided by
written premiums, expressed as a percentage.
Experience rating—Used by virtually all carriers, this is
the practice of basing insurance premiums on the past loss
history of individual insureds or entities.
Frequency of claims—Refers to the number of claims that
are filed. Frequency and average severity of claims are the
fundamental variables used in determining insurance premiums.
Fronting company—A company whose name is on the face of
an insurance certificate. Different from the intermediary
company that is actually writing the policy and taking on the
risk.
Gatekeeper—The HMO's method of controlling patient
referral(s). A patient must first see a primary care physician
(PCP), who will then refer to a specialist if necessary. The
term gatekeeper is considered derogatory by many.
Health maintenance organization (HMO)—A legal corporation
that offers health insurance and medical care. HMOs require
their subscriber members (patients), except in a medical
emergency, to use the services of designated physicians,
hospitals or other providers of medical care. HMOs typically use
a capitation payment system that rewards providers for
cost-effective management of patients.
Hold-harmless clause—A hold-harmless clause (also known
as an indemnification clause) attempts to shift liability from
one party to another (e.g., from an HMO to an employed
physician). Courts may modify or refuse to uphold such
agreements if they are deemed harmful to the public or the
parties are perceived to have unequal bargaining power.
Incident—An incident is an event with the potential to
result in a claim through injury or property damage, a worsening
of an injury or condition and in the worst-case scenario, a
patient death. The following are some of the most common types
of incidents that can result in claims: departures from
established medical procedure or policy, an event resulting in
an injury to a patient, an unfavorable delay in treatment, a
premature discharge of a hospital patient and a failure to give
informed consent.
Informed consent—An agreement obtained voluntarily from a
patient for the performance of specific medical, surgical or
research procedures after the material risks and benefits of
these procedures and their alternatives have been fully
explained in nontechnical terms.
Injury—A legal term that consists of two types. The
first, more obvious, definition refers to bodily or physical
injury. The second is broader in nature and includes claims
resulting from false arrest, detention, imprisonment, wrongful
entry or eviction, malicious prosecution, libel, slander, a
violation of an individual's right to privacy, assault or
battery, and includes mental anguish, mental shock or
hallucination.
Insurance gap—When a physician has professional liability
insurance under a claims-made policy, once the coverage period
has expired without renewal, claims that have not yet been made
and reported to the carrier (insurance company) during the
"active" policy period are not covered. In such cases, a
physician is said to be "bare" (uninsured), unless he or she has
purchased an extended reporting endorsement (tail coverage) from
the former carrier, or has obtained "prior acts" (nose) coverage
from a new carrier.
Insurance policy—The document that defines contractual
responsibilities between a physician and an insurance company is
an insurance policy. The purpose of an insurance policy is to
provide for the transfer of risk of financial loss from the
physician to the insurance company within the financial limits
defined by the policy. This contractual transfer generally
occurs when a physician provides payment (a premium) to the
carrier in exchange for the carrier's promise to defend and/or
pay covered claims against the insured.
Insured premises—As defined in the definitions section of
the SCPIE policy (important to office premises liability
coverage) for individual physicians and their solo medical
corporations: "Insured Premises means the premises used by the
named insured physician as a professional medical office at the
address listed in item two (2) of the declarations insert and at
any additional location named in an endorsement to this policy,
and includes the ways immediately adjoining such premises on
land." In other words, the primary place where the insured
regularly sees patients and practices medicine.
Limits of coverage—The maximum professional liability
amount that can be paid under the terms of a policy.
Professional liability policies typically specify limits per
claim and a cumulative limit for all claims incurred during the
term of the contract, which in SCPIE's case is during the
calendar year. The SCPIE policy provides per-claim and aggregate
per-calendar-year limits of coverage options of $500,000/$1.5
million, $1 million/$3 million and $5 million/$5 million. With
some carriers, defense costs are counted against the policy
limit, whereas with SCPIE, defense costs do not offset
limits—policy limits are entirely available for paying indemnity
only.
Litigation—The process of resolving a dispute in a court
of law to determine factual and legal issues, as well as the
rights and duties between the parties to the controversy, and to
award damages or other relief.
Not all claims received by SCPIE ever make it to the
litigation stage, and only a small percentage of cases in
litigation ever go to trial.
Locum tenens—A substitute physician who temporarily takes
the place of a named insured policyholder or physician member of
a medical group. Under the terms of the SCPIE policy, this
coverage is contingent upon the SCPIE policyholder or member
physician not practicing during the period in which the Locum
Tenens coverage is in effect.
Loss ratio—SCPIE has two types of loss ratios: paid loss
ratio and incurred loss ratio. A paid loss ratio is the
amount of premium a policyholder has paid to SCPIE through the
years versus the amount SCPIE has paid out on his or her behalf
for defense and indemnity. For instance, a paid loss ratio of
50% means SCPIE has paid out 50% of what we've received in
premium from a particular policyholder. A paid loss ratio of
100% means we've taken in the same amount as we've paid
out—broken even. Anything more than 100% is not good—it means
we're paying out more than we're taking in.
An incurred loss ratio is the amount we have paid out
(defense and indemnity) plus the amount we expect to pay out
(reserves) for a particular policyholder versus the amount of
premium a policyholder has paid to SCPIE throughout the years. A
policyholder who has never filed a claim has a 0% incurred loss
ratio.
Mature premium—SCPIE uses a step rating system to set
premiums for its claims-made policies. The mature premium is the
fee a policyholder will pay during the sixth year of coverage.
The first level premium is substantially lower than a mature
premium. It is designed for policyholders who are new to
practice and therefore have no claims history. The mature-level
rate reflects the fact that the majority of claims are filed
within four to five years of an incident.
MICRA—Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act of 1975.
Legislation passed by the California Legislature in an emergency
session in response to a medical liability insurance crisis that
resulted in proposed skyrocketing increases in physician medical
liability insurance premiums of between 300% and 500%. MICRA
places a $250,000 cap on noneconomic damages (pain and
suffering), limits attorney contingency fees and allows periodic
payments of future damages in excess of $50,000. MICRA created
the Board of Medical Quality Assurance (now the Medical Board of
California).
Nose coverage—Nose coverage covers claims first made
against the physician after the effective date of coverage on
the SCPIE policy. To be covered, such claims must arise out of
the physician's acts or omissions prior to the SCPIE
policy's effective date and after its retroactive date.
(Both dates are shown on the declarations page of the policy.) A
final note: Nose coverage is also known as retroactive coverage
or prior acts coverage.
Occurrence—This term refers to an accident, or a single
act or omission, which results in injury or property damage to
any person or corporation. An occurrence may include any
continuous or repeated exposures to conditions that result in
injuries or property damage. Covered injuries are only those
that are accidental, meaning unexpected and unintentional on the
part of an insured. For the purpose of determining liability,
SCPIE considers all injuries to a person that result from an act
or omission, or a series or related acts or omissions, and all
bodily injuries and property damage that arise from continuous
or repeated exposure to substantially the same general
conditions, as constituting a single occurrence.
Occurrence coverage—A policyholder is covered for any
event that occurs during the term of the policy, regardless of
when the claim arising from the event is reported. This coverage
was formerly the most prevalent professional liability
insurance, but today it is generally not available due to its
higher cost.
Periodic payments—synonym: structured settlements.
Damages paid over a period of time instead of in a lump sum.
Periodic payments may be mandated when damages exceed a certain
amount. Some periodic payment awards cease upon the death of the
plaintiff.
Policy endorsement—Also called "riders," "policy changes"
and "amendments," they alter basic policy provisions by adding,
excluding or modifying coverages. As defined within the SCPIE
policy (for individual physicians), "endorsement means a
document that modifies the coverage or other provisions set
forth in the policy. If the terms of any endorsement are
inconsistent with the terms of this policy, the terms of the
endorsement supersede the policy." SCPIE often uses endorsements
to tailor a policy to individual practice situations.
Primary insurance—Insurance that covers an insured from
the first dollar of loss, after any deductible or self-insured
retention (as distinguished from umbrella or excess insurance).
Prior acts (nose) coverage—This is a supplement to a
claims-made policy; it is purchased from the new carrier when a
healthcare provider changes claims-made insurers. Prior acts
coverage, also known as "nose" coverage, protects physicians
from liability associated with incidents that occurred prior to
the beginning of their new claims-made policy with a new
insurance company, but that have not yet been brought as a claim
against the physicians. Such coverage is an alternative to an
"extended reporting endorsement," or tail coverage (discussed in
its definition) that is purchased from the original carrier when
a change in carriers is made.
Professional liability coverage—Liability coverage for
professionals such as physicians for acts or omissions that
cause injury during the performance of their professional
duties. When an insured is liable for injury or damage due to
professional negligence, a carrier pays the injured party on
behalf of, and with the consent of, the insured.
Punitive damages—Also known as exemplary damages. Awarded
to the plaintiff in cases of intentional tort or gross
negligence to punish the defendant or act as a deterrent to
others.
Reinsurance—A contractual arrangement in which one
insurance company buys insurance from another company to
transfer part of the risk that the first company has insured.
The company transferring the risk exposures is called the
primary insurer, and the company accepting the exposure is the
reinsurer. The amount of risk transferred varies from one
company to another. SCPIE uses reinsurance for spreading out its
risk exposures and reducing the effects of large losses to
ensure financial stability.
Reserves—Money set aside and invested by an insurance
company to pay estimated future losses. A company's claims
department typically specifies a reserve amount for every claim
that is filed, which may be modified as the claim proceeds in
the courts.
Retroactive date—The date on which a policy's coverage
begins. The retroactive date may be the same as or earlier than
a policy's effective date.
Reunderwriting—The process by which the company
reevaluates policyholders and, as necessary, imposes surcharges,
deductibles or nonrenewal in cases where the policyholder's
claims history or other experience presents a consistent pattern
that creates an undue liability risk.
Risk purchasing group (RPG)—A group of similarly situated
persons or entities that are permitted under federal law to
organize across state lines to buy insurance. The carrier that
sells insurance to the group must be licensed in at least one
state but need not be licensed in every state where a member of
the group resides.
Risk retention group (RRG)—A group of similarly situated
persons or entities that are permitted under federal law to
organize across state lines for the purpose of pooling their
liability risk and self-insuring. If the group is licensed in
one state, it is permitted to solicit business and sell
insurance nationwide without fulfilling each state's licensure
requirements.
Standard of care—A term used in the legal definition of
medical malpractice. A physician is required to adhere to the
standards of practice of reasonably competent physicians, in the
same or similar circumstances, with comparable training and
experience.
Stop loss insurance—Insurance offered to medical groups
and hospitals that hold managed care contracts. This insurance
covers the policyholder in case its patients suffer catastrophic
medical conditions beyond the standard and customary.
Surcharge—An extra charge applied to an account. At SCPIE,
surcharges for individual physicians are determined by SCPIE's
Physicians Underwriting Committee. Surcharges may be applied to
policyholders with a high frequency of claims and/or
settlements, or those whose claims receive negative medical
expert review.
Surplus—The amount by which an insurer's assets exceed
its liabilities.
Tail coverage—This supplemental insurance covers
incidents that occurred during the "active" period of a
claims-made policy but are not brought as claims against an
insured, nor reported to the insurer, by the time the
claims-made policy has been terminated. Generally needed at the
time of retirement, upon the decision to change claims-made
carriers, or due to death or total disability of the member,
tail coverage is purchased from an insured's previous
claims-made carrier.
Utilization review (UR)—Evaluation of the level,
frequency and necessity of medical care. Helps ensure proper use
of healthcare resources by providing for the regular review of
such areas as admission of patients, length of stay, services
performed and referrals. |