A Consumer's Insurance Glossary
A Compendium of Words and
Phrases Insurance People Use
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AAA
A & H, A &S —
Accident & Health or Accident & Sickness. Once
commonly used as generic designations for the entire
field, now called Health Insurance.
Actual Cash Value —
The sum of money required to pay for damages or lost
property, computed on the basis of replacement value
less its depreciation by obsolescence or general
wear.
Actuary — A
specialist in the mathematics of insurance who
calculates rates, reserves, etc. (Americanism. In
most other countries the individual is known as a
"mathematician.")
Actuarial —
Statistical calculations used to determine insurance
rates and premiums, based on projections of
utilization and costs for a defined risk.
Adjuster — An
individual usually representing the insurance
company and acting for the company in working on
agreements as to the amount of a loss and the
liability of the company in same.
Administrative Costs
— Costs related to utilization review, insurance
marketing, medical underwriting, agents'
commissions, premium collection, claims processing,
insurer profit, quality assurance programs and risk
management.
Administrative Services Only
(ASO) — See Third-Party Administrator.
Admitted Company — An
insurance company authorized and licensed to do
business in a given state.
Adverse Selection —
This occurs when a plan's health insurance
population, usually due to age or health status, has
a significantly higher utilization of health care
services than an average population. The result is
costs exceeding premiums or fees collected. Also
occurs when a programs eligibility criteria or
rating structure causes it to be populated with
insureds with higher losses than expected.
Age Limits — The ages
below or above which the insurance company will not
issue a given policy or renew a policy in force.
Agent — Any person
appointed by an insurer to solicit applications for
insurance on its behalf. With authorization, an
agent may effectuate insurance contracts. An agent
may collect premiums on insurance so applied for or
effectuated. (from the RCW 48.17.010)
All-Categories — A
requirement initially passed in the 1993 Washington
Health Services Act provides access to different
kinds of health-care providers licensed or certified
by the state. The requirement, which went into
effect in 1996, applies to state-regulated insurance
contracts, but limited to conditions that are
covered in the benefit package of Basic Health. The
law was subsequently known as the "Complementary and
Alternative Providers" or "Licensed-Provider"
statute.
Annuity — (1) An
amount of money payable yearly, or by extension, at
other regular intervals. (2) An agreement by an
insurer to make periodic payments that continue
during the survival of the annuitant (the
beneficiary of the policy) or for a specified
period.
Any Willing Provider
— A mandate that requires health insurance carriers
to contract with any health-care providers willing
to treat a carrier's subscribers. (Sometimes
confused with the "all-categories" law defined
above.)
Application (APP) — A
form on which the prospective insured states facts
requested by the insurance company and on the basis
of which (together with any information from medical
examiners, attending physicians, hospitals,
investigations, and the agent) the insurance company
decides whether or not to accept the risk, modify
the coverage offered, or decline the risk. An
application without premium money is a request for
an offer. With premium money, it is an offer itself,
unless the insurance company declines to issue as
applied for.
Apportionment — The
division of loss among insurance companies when two
or more cover the same loss.
Assigned Risk — A
risk which underwriters do not care to insure, but
because of state law or otherwise, the insured must
be protected and the insurance is therefore handled
through the state, or a bureau and assigned to
companies.
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BBB
Basic Health (BH) —
This plan was created in 1987 to provide low-cost,
limited benefits in high unemployment areas of the
state. Under the 1993 Health Services Act, the BH
was expanded to statewide and its benefits were
improved.
Beneficiary — A
person eligible to receive benefits under an
insurance policy.
Benefit Package —
Also known as a Benefit Schedule. The list of
covered services offered by an HCSC, HMO or
insurance plan.
Binder (Or Binding Receipt)
— In lines other than life and (usually) health, a
binder is an acknowledgment (usually from the agent)
that the insurance applied for is in force whether
or not premium settlement has yet been made or the
policy issued. In life and health insurance, binders
are not issued, but if the premium settlement is
made with the application, what is often erroneously
referred to as a binder or "binding receipt" is
issued. Actually, this is a conditional binding
receipt.
Book of Business —
The term insurers use to refer to the sum of their
various plans and types of insurance products sold
to consumers.
Broker — (1) An
individual who for compensation solicits, negotiates
or procures insurance or the renewal or continuance
thereof on behalf of insureds or prospective
insureds. (2) One who solicits, negotiates, or
procures the making of contracts of insurance on
behalf of the insured, other than himself or another
broker, and who may render services incidental to
these functions, except as an employee of an
insured. (To this definition, the Commission on
Insurance Terminology adds this comment: "By law,
may be made agent of the insurer (insurance company)
for certain purposes such as delivery of policy or
collection of premium.")
Business Interruption
Insurance — A type of policy that pays for
loss of earnings when operations are curtailed or
suspended because of property loss.
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CCC
Cancelable — A
contract of insurance that may be terminated by the
insurance company or insured at any time. Most
insurance is cancelable. The exceptions are certain
life insurance policies and health insurance, which
in Washington state is now guaranteed renewable,
provided subscribers pay their premiums.
Cancellation —
Termination of contract of insurance in force by
voluntary act of the insurance company or insured,
effected in accordance with provisions in the
contract or by mutual agreement.
Capitation — A
per-member monthly payment made in advance to a
managed care insurer covering contracted services.
The insurance provider agrees to provide specified
services to eligible members of a plan for this
fixed, predetermined payment for a specified length
of time (usually a year), regardless of how many
times the member uses the services. No additional
payment is made to the provider for services that
exceed the agreed-upon amount-per-member. In such a
product, the rate may be the same for all members or
adjusted for age and gender, based on actuarial
projections of medical utilization.
Carrier — An
insurance company which "carries" the insurance.
(The term "insurance company" or "insurer" are
preferred because of the possible confusion of
"carrier" with transportation terminology.)
Carve-out — Services
separately designed and contracted to an exclusive,
independent provider by a managed care plan.
Case Management —
Coordination of patient care to ensure appropriate
care and reductions in costs of providing services.
Physician case managers coordinate such elements as
referrals to consultants, specialists, hospitals,
ancillary providers and services. This is intended
to eliminate misutilization of facilities and
resources, fragmented services and to provide
continuity of services and intensity of services
appropriate to the patient's needs over time.
Cash Value — The
amount of cash that is due the insured who
surrenders a LIFE (and, extremely rarely) or HEALTH
policy. Such surrender with termination of all
insurance benefits is often called "cashing out."
Chartered Property and
Casualty Underwriter (CPCU) — A designation
granted by the American Institute for Property and
Liability Underwriters upon successful completion of
a series of examinations and experience requirements
in the fields of insurance, plus accounting,
financing, economics, management, and law.
Claim — The demand
for benefits as provided by the policy.
Claims Review — The
process of analyzing a managed care plan enrollee's
health care service claims before reimbursement to
validate their medical necessity and ensure the
costs are not excessive.
Clause — A term used
to identify a particular part of a policy or
endorsement.
Closed Formulary —
See drug formulary.
CLU — Chartered Life
Underwriter, a designation granted after examination
and experience requirements by the American College
of Life Underwriters.
Co-Insurance — In
health insurance, it is a provision that the insured
and the carrier share losses in agreed proportion.
Also known as "percentage participation." In managed
health care, it refers to the portion of the cost of
care for which the individual is responsible,
usually determined by a fixed percentage. This often
applies after a specified deductible is met. In
property and casualty insurance, the insured shares
proportionally in losses when the amount of
insurance is less than a specified percentage of the
property insured.
Collision Coverage —
Physical damage protection for the insured's own
automobile(s) for damage resulting from collision
with another object. This is a part of most
automobile insurance policies.
Commission — That
portion of the premium retained by the agent or
broker as compensation for sales, service, and
distribution of insurance policies.
Community Rating — A
method of establishing the level of premiums for
health insurance in which the premium is based on
the average of actual or anticipated services used
by all subscribers in a specific geographic area (or
the entire state). Under pure community rating,
premiums also would not vary for different groups or
with such variables as a group's claims experience,
age, sex, occupation or health status. (Modified
community rating may allow slight variances for some
of these factors.) The intent of community rating is
to spread costs evenly across an entire population,
rather than set premiums according to individual or
small group experiences.
Composite Rate — A
uniform premium applicable to all those eligible in
a subscriber group, regardless of the number of
claimed dependents. This is common among plans
purchased by large employer groups.
Comprehensive Health
Insurance — Sometimes called "Comprehensive
Major Medical." A form of health insurance that
combines the coverage of Major Medical and Basic
Medical Expense contracts into one broad contract
that provides coverage for almost all types of
medical expense with few internal limits, usually
subject to a small deductible for some or all
expenses and to a percentage participation clause
(sometimes called "co-insurance") applicable to all
or some of the covered expenses.
Comprehensive Personal
Liability Policy (CPL) — A personal liability
contract. It provides liability insurance coverage
for the individual and family needs arising out of
numerous personal activities and situations, such as
the ownership of residential property, ownership of
pets, sports activities and many other everyday
activities.
Concurrent Review —
Review of a procedure or hospital admission made by
a health care professional (usually a nurse) other
than the individual providing the care.
Contract Bond — A
guarantee of the faithful performance of a contract
and the payment of all labor and material bills
incident thereto. In those situations where two
bonds are required, one to cover performance and the
other to cover payment of labor and material, the
former is known as a PERFORMANCE bond and the latter
as a PAYMENT bond.
Coordination of Benefits
(COB) — This determines the amount payable by
each insurer when the claimant is covered under two
or more group health plans. Total reimbursement
should not exceed 100 percent of the cost of care.
Co-Payment — A
co-payment is a patient's share of a health-care
bill. It usually is a small amount - $5 or $10 per
office visit. Health-care reform advocates say its
primary function is to remind consumers that health
care is not free - and to discourage them from
seeking unnecessary care.
Cost Sharing — The
general set of financing arrangements whereby the
consumer must pay out-of-pocket to receive care,
either at the time of initiating care or during the
provision of services, or both. This also can occur
when an insured pays a portion of the monthly
premium for his health insurance.
Cost Shifting — When
an insurer charges one group of health care
purchasers more to make up for the underpayment of
others.
Coverage — Scope of
the protection provided under a contract of
insurance.
Credentialling — The
review of a health care practitioner's credentials,
e.g. training, experience, demonstrated ability, to
determine if that provider meets the carrier's
internal criteria for clinical privileging.
Credit Insurance —
Insurance on a debtor in favor of a lender intended
to pay off a loan or the balance thereon if the
insured dies or is disabled (usually called "CREDIT
LIFE" policy).
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DDD
Debit — The
collectable premium accounts assigned to one
industrial or combination agent.
Declaration Page (Dec Sheet)
— The portion of an insurance policy containing the
information regarding the risk. It identifies the
parties to the contract and the subject of coverage.
Decreasing Term Policy
— Generally, a rider which is attached to cash value
policies or other term policies. The protection
decreases each year or month in accordance with a
schedule. Also sold as MORTGAGE Protection policy.
Deductible — The part
of the insured's expenses or loss that must be paid
before insurance coverage begins.
Deferred Annuity — An
annuity whose benefits begin at some designated
future date (as contrasted to an annuity where
benefits begin at once, called an IMMEDIATE
annuity).
Diagnosis-Related Groups
(DRG) — This refers to predetermined
reimbursements. DRGs were originally designed to
facilitate utilization review, and are also used to
analyze patient case mix in hospitals and to
determine reimbursement policy.
Direct Access — Under
a 1995 Washington law, health-insurance carriers
must cover direct access to women's health-care
service providers when that care is appropriate.
Insurance companies also cannot create unfair
obstacles to this access, including a requirement
for women to visit "gatekeeper" or primary-care
providers first.
Direct Writer — An
insurance company which sells its policies through
salaried employees (licensed agents) who represent
it exclusively, rather than through independent
local agents, who represent more than one company.
Disability Income Insurance
— A form of health insurance that provides periodic
payments to replace income lost when the insured is
unable to work as a result of sickness or injury.
Drug Formulary — A
list of selected pharmaceuticals and their
appropriate dosages that will be covered by a health
plan. In a "closed formulary," physicians are
required to prescribe from that list of drugs.
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EEE
Earned Premium — That
portion of a premium for which the policy protection
has already been given during the now-expired
portion of the policy term.
Elimination Period —
A loosely-used term sometimes designating the
"waiting period" and sometimes the "probationary
period."
Endorsement — A form
attached to the policy bearing the language
necessary to change the terms of the policy to fit
special circumstances.
Endowment Insurance —
A form of life insurance payable to the insured if
living at the end of the endowment period or to a
beneficiary if the insured dies before the endowment
date. (Inasmuch as a whole life policy pays the face
amount at the ultimate age of the mortality table
used in calculating the rate for it, age 100 on the
CSO Table, it is sometimes said that whole life is
"endowment at 100." However, while perhaps a
descriptive explanation of a WHOLE LIFE policy, it
is actuarially incorrect to refer to a whole life
policy as a form of Endowment insurance.)
Early and Periodic
Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT) —
Covers screening and diagnostic services to
determining physical or mental defects in patients
under age 21, as well as health care and other
measures to correct or ameliorate any defects and
chronic conditions discovered.
ERISA — The Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974. This law,
which dealt primarily with pensions and retirement
plans, includes a section exempting self-funded
employer and union health plans from state
regulation. Washington's health-care reform law -
the Health Services Act of 1993 - required a
congressional waiver of this law so that the state
could mandate employer-provided health coverage. The
waiver did not pass, and the state law was
subsequently changed.
Exclusions — Clauses
in a health insurance contract that deny coverage
for certain conditions, treatments, supplies or
risks, such as acts of war. In property and casualty
contracts, certain events or circumstances also may
be excluded from coverage.
Exclusive Provider
Organization (EPO) — A managed care
organization similar to PPOs in that physicians do
not receive capitated payments, but members may only
choose medical care from network providers. A
patient seeking care outside the EPO network would
not be reimbursed for the cost of that treatment.
See also Group Model HMO.
Experience — The loss
record of an insured, a class of coverage, or of an
insurance company.
Experience Rating — A
method used by insurers to determine the premium to
be charged based on the actual utilization of
individual large groups. Federal qualification
guidelines for HMOs do not permit this rating
method, but it is common in other health insurance
plans.
Exposure — (1) State
of being subject to the possibility of loss. (2)
Extent of risk as measured by payroll, gate
receipts, area, or otherwise. (3) Possibility of
loss to a risk being caused by its surroundings.
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FFF
Face — The first page
of a policy.
Face Amount — In a
life insurance policy, the death benefit stated on
the first page of the policy.
Federally Qualified HMOs
— Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) that meet
certain federal requirements designed to protect
consumers, such as providing a broad range of basic
health services, financial solvency, and a system to
monitor the quality of care. The qualification
process is administered by the Health Care Financing
Administration (HCFA, pronounced "Hick-fah") in the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS).
Fee — A charge or
price for professional services.
Fee Disclosure —
Physicians and caregivers discussing their charges
with patients prior to treatment.
Fee-for-Service — The
traditional payment method in U.S. health care, when
patients pay doctors, hospitals and other providers
for the services rendered at the time of that
service, and then seek reimbursement for those costs
from their private insurers or the government, if
eligible for such a program (e.g. Medicare). The
patient is charged according to a fee schedule set
for each service and or procedure provided.
Fiduciary — A person
who occupies a position of special trust and
confidence (for example, in handling or supervising
the affairs or funds of another).
Fiscal Intermediary —
An organization that contracts with health care
providers to process health insurance claims. It may
also provide consulting services or serve as a
communication center for providers. A Health Care
Services Contractor (HCSC).
Form — An insurance
policy itself or riders and endorsements attached to
it.
Fraternal — An
insurance company organized under a special section
of the state insurance code, characterized by a
lodge or social system, and issuing insurance only
to members.
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GGG
Gatekeeper — A
primary care physician responsible for overseeing
and coordinating all aspects of a patient's medical
care in managed care plans to reduce health care
utilization and costs. Managed care patients cannot
receive referrals to specialty care or hospital
admission (except for emergency room service when
the patient believes an emergency exists) without
pre-authorization from a gatekeeper.
General Agent — An
insurance company representative in a given
territory, entrusted with the task of supervising
the company's business within that territory. He may
appoint local agents whom he services. A true
general agent is an independent contractor
compensated on a commission basis. In practice, in
the life and health fields, he may receive certain
expense subsidies from the company for office
operation and training of new agents.
Grace Period — A
period of time (commonly 30-31 days) after
premium-due date during which a policy remains in
force without penalty even though the premium due
has not been paid.
Group Contract — A
contract of insurance made with an employer or other
entity that covers a group of persons identified as
individuals by reference to their relationship to
the entity. A GROUP CONTRACT may be life insurance,
health insurance, or an annuity. There are some
applications in the property-liability field.
Group Insurance —
Insurance policy or health services contract
covering a group of employees (and often their
dependents) under a single contract issued to an
employer or other group by an HCSC, HMO or other
insurer.
Group Model HMO —
There are two types: closed panel and the contract
model. Closed panel HMO deliver medical services in
the HMO's health center or clinics by providers who
belong to a legally separate medical group paid a
negotiated monthly capitation fee. Its providers are
salaried and generally prohibited from carrying on
any fee-for-service practice. In the second type,
the HMO contracts with an existing independent group
of physicians to deliver medical care at their
facilities to HMO members for a prepaid fee. Such a
medical group may also offer health services on a
fee-for-service basis. The medical group generally
contracts with more than one HMO.
Guaranteed Insurability
Rider — A rider that may be attached to a
health or life insurance policy, which permits the
insured, to purchase additional insurance at one or
more specified "option dates," without providing new
evidence of insurability at that time.
Guaranteed Renewable
— A contract that the insured has the right to
continue in force by the timely payment of premiums
for a substantial period of time, as set forth in
the contract, during which period the insurance
company has no right unilaterally to make any change
in a provision of the contract while the contract is
in force, other than a change in the premium rate
for classes of insured. (In commenting on this
definition, the Committee on Health Insurance
Terminology of the American Risk and Insurance
Association adds: "The term guaranteed continuable
is synonymous with guaranteed renewable. Guaranteed
renewable should be distinguished from
non-cancelable.") An NAIC - National Association of
Insurance Commissioners - definition specifies that
the policy must be renewable to at least age 50 or,
if issued after age 44, for at least five years.
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HHH
Health Care Service
Contractor (HCSC) — A legal entity in
Washington state that may be sponsored by certain
health professionals or which uses contracts with
health professionals for the provision of prepaid
health care services. Examples of HCSCs include Blue
Cross/Blue Shield plans.
Health Care Financing
Administration (HCFA) — The U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (DHHS) agency renamed
to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS) that administers federal health financing and
related regulatory programs, principally Medicare,
Medicaid, and Peer Review Organization programs. The
contracting agency for HMOs that provide Medicare
managed care plans.
Health Insurance —
Insurance against loss by sickness or bodily injury.
Health Maintenance
Organization (HMO) — A legal entity in
Washington state that provides health care in a
geographic area, and which accepts responsibility to
provide directly or by contract an agreed-upon set
of health services to a defined,
voluntarily-enrolled group of individuals. HMOs are
reimbursed through a pre-determined, fixed, periodic
prepayment made by or on behalf of each subscriber
without regard to the amount of actual services
provided. (In other states, HMOs are regarded as
synonymous with "managed care." However, in
Washington state other kinds of health carriers also
may employ managed care.)
Health Plan — A
generic term referring to a specific benefit package
offered by an insurer.
High Risk Pool — A
non-profit entity called the Washington State Health
Insurance Pool, created by state law in 1987, to
provide access to health insurance to all residents
of Washington who are denied adequate health
insurance for any reason. (RCW 48.41) The premium is
limited 150 percent of the average group premium
charged in the marketplace or 125 percent of the
average group premium if the health plan is managed
care. An assessment on health insurers operating in
the state, based on the number of individuals each
carrier covers, provides any subsidy needed.
"Hold Harmless" Clause
— found in managed care contracts in which the HMO
and its physicians hold each other not liable for
malpractice or corporate malfeasance if either is
found liable. This clause is also common for
insurance carriers. State law requires this type of
clause to prohibit health care providers from
billing patients if their managed care company
becomes insolvent.
Homeowner Policy — A
"package" or multi-line policy providing the
protection needed by most homeowners. The policy
provides property insurance, including theft, with
very broad coverage on both the building and the
contents. Liability insurance is also provided.
There are basically six homeowner forms available in
most states, and they are numbered 1 through 6.
Homeowner 6 is used for owners of condominium units.
Homeowner 5 provides the broadest protection.
Homeowner 4 is for use by tenants as it excludes
building coverage. Homeowner 3, 2, and 1 are similar
to Homeowner 5 except that they provide
progressively less coverage respectively.
Hospital Benefits —
Benefits payable when an insured is hospitalized.
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III
Incurred but not reported
(IBNR) — The liability for the claim cost
related to services performed within the contractual
period but not yet reported to the insurance
carrier, HMO or HCSC.
Indemnify — To
restore the victim of a loss, in whole or in part,
by payment, repair, or replacement. (To this
definition, the Commission on Terminology adds the
following comment: "To the extent that the
obligation of the insurer is to do other than make
good losses, the insurance contract is not one of
indemnity. The term indemnity or indemnify should
not be used to apply to an obligation other than to
make good loss.")
Independent Practice
Association/Organization (IPA/IPO) — An HMO
contracting with a physician organization which in
turn contracts with individual physicians to provide
health services to its members. IPA physicians
practice in their own offices and also see
fee-for-service patients. The IPA is reimbursed on a
capitated basis. The IPA may reimburse its
physicians on a capitated or modified
fee-for-service basis when physicians charge
agreed-upon rates to the HMO patients and then bill
the IPA.
Individual Market —
The portion of the health insurance industry
consisting of individuals and their dependents who
purchase coverage directly from a carrier -
approximately five percent of the entire market.
Those in the individual market usually buy their own
coverage because they are not eligible for
employee-sponsored or government coverage, such as
Medicare, Medicaid or the Children's Health
Insurance Program (CHIP).
Installment Refund Annuity
— Promises to continue the periodic payments after
the death of the annuitant, until the combined
benefits paid to the annuitant and his beneficiary
have equaled the purchase price of the annuity.
Insurable Interest —
Any interest in a subject of insurance or any legal
relation to it of such a nature that a certain
happening might cause monetary loss to the insured.
Insurance — (1) A
contract whereby one undertakes to indemnify another
or pay a specified amount upon determinable
contingencies. (2) A device for the transfer of the
risks of individual entities to an insurance
company, which agrees, for a consideration, to
assume to a specified extent, losses suffered by the
insured.
(To this definition, the Commission on
Terminology adds this comment: "Notice might be
taken of such characteristics of insurance as
equitable contributions by insured, pooling or
risks, and effecting of transfer by contract,
but these are not felt to be an important part
of the definition, however important they may be
for an extended explanation of the business.")
Insurance Commissioner
— The elected state official with the authority to
enforce the provisions of the state's insurance code
and to make reasonable rules and regulations to
implement provisions of the code; to conduct
investigations, examinations and hearings related to
those enforcement activities.
Insurance Policy —
Broadly, the entire written contract of insurance.
More narrowly, the basic written or printed
document, as distinguished from the forms and
endorsements added thereto.
Insured — The party
to an insurance agreement to whom, or on behalf of
whom, the insurance company agrees to indemnify for
losses, provide benefits, or render service. (To
this definition the Commission on Terminology adds
the comment: "Like Insurer, the term Insured is
functional and unmistakable. Therefore, it is
preferred to such terms as Policyholder.") In
pre-paid hospital service plans, the insured is
called the subscriber.
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JJJ
Joint Life Policy —
Pays the insurance when the first of two or more
covered persons die.
KKK
Key Man — (Key
Employee) Insurance Policy - An insurance policy on
the life of a key employee whose death would cause
the employer financial loss, owned by and payable to
the employer. In health insurance, the term KEY
EMPLOYEE A & H policy is also used to designate
salary continuation insurance payable to a key
employee or to a medical benefits plan, payable to
that employee, the employer paying all or part of
the premium.
LLL
Lapse — Termination
of a policy because of failure to pay the premium.
In life insurance, the term is sometimes confined to
non-payment before the policy has developed any
non-forfeiture value, being called termination if
premium failure is after non-forfeiture values
develop or surrender if cash value is withdrawn.
Level Premium Insurance
— Life insurance, the premium for which remains at
the same level (amount) throughout the life of the
policy (except as reduced by any policy dividends).
Liability Insurance —
Insurance that pays and renders service on behalf of
an insured for loss arising out of his
responsibility, due to negligence, to others imposed
by law or assumed by contract.
Liability Limits —
The sum or sums beyond which a liability insurance
company does not protect the insured on a particular
policy, similar to limit of liability.
Life Insurance —
Insurance on human lives including endowment
benefits, additional benefits in event of death or
dismemberment by accident or accidental means,
additional benefits for disability, and annuities.
Lifetime Policy — (1)
A policy guaranteed renewable or non-cancelable to
age 65 (or sometimes later). (2) A policy paying
disability benefits for life.
Limit of Liability —
The maximum amount that an insurance company agrees
to pay in case of loss.
Limitations —
Exclusions, exceptions, or reductions of coverage
contained in an insurance policy.
Limits — (1) Maximum
amount of benefit payable for a given situation or
occurrence. (2) Ages below or above which the
insurance company will not issue new policy or above
which it will not continue a policy in force.
Long-Term Disability
— (1) A disability having a duration longer than a
short-term disability, the exact duration being
variable and a matter of reference; more commonly
anything longer than 90 days. (2) A form of group
disability insurance paying benefits for more than
the customary 13 to 26 weeks; more commonly,
benefits of five years' duration or more, but again
depending on terms of reference.
Loss — Any diminution
of quantity, quality or value of property. With
reference to policies of indemnity, this term means
a valid claim for recovery thereunder. In its
application to liability policies, the term refers
to payments made on behalf of the insured.
Loss Ratio — The
percentage of losses to premiums, usually losses
incurred to premiums earned. The amount of the
premium dollar returned to the insured as claims
payments and other benefits.
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MMM
Major Hospitalization Policy
or Insurance — A type of health insurance
that provides benefits for most of the costs of
hospitalization up to a high limit, subject to a
large deductible. Such policies may contain internal
maximum limits and percentage participation clauses.
They are distinguished from major medical by the
fact that they pay only in event of hospitalization.
Major Medical Insurance
— A type of health insurance that provides benefits
for most types of medical expenses incurred up to a
high limit, subject to a large deductible. Such
contracts may contain internal limits and a
percentage participation clause (sometimes called
co-insurance clause). A major medical policy pays
expenses both in and out of the hospital.
Managed Care —
Managed care is a philosophy of health care coverage
that streamlines health services and creates a
health-care system that includes both the financing
and delivery of services to the consumer. It also
takes more responsibility for maintaining
subscribers' health, not just curing them once they
are sick. It lowers costs by matching the patient
with appropriate care as efficiently as possible.
Different insurance carriers use different kinds of
managed care. Although the philosophy is popularly
associated with Health Maintenance Organizations
(HMOs), other kinds of carriers also employ it.
Managed Care Organization
(MCO) — Any type of organizational entity
providing managed care, such as an HMO or an HCSC
providing services via a preferred provider
organization (PPO).
Mandated Benefits —
Washington state law requires certain benefits be
included in any major medical coverage. These
include mammograms, automatic coverage of newborn or
adopted children, home/hospice treatment options,
and others as required by the Legislature.
Market Share — That
part of the market potential a company has captured,
usually expressed as a percentage of the market
potential.
Maturity — The date
at which the face amount of a life insurance policy
comes due either by reason of death or endowment.
Maximum Allowable Charge
— The amount set by the insurer as the highest
amount to be charged for a particular medical
service.
Medical Cost Ratio (MCR)
— Compares the cost of providing service to the
amount paid for the service.
Medical Group Practice
— As defined by the American Group Practice
Association, the American Medical Association and
the Medical Group Management Association: "provision
of health care services by a group of at least three
licensed physicians engaged in a formally organized
and legally recognized entity sharing equipment,
facilities, common records and personnel involved in
both patient care and business management."
Medical Loss Ratio —
Cost of health care services provided as a
percentage of premium revenues. See underwriting
loss.
Medical Underwriting
— Screening prospective health care plan members out
of the plan on the basis of health or pre-existing
medical condition. This is currently not legal in
Washington.
Medically Necessary —
Covered services required to preserve and maintain
the health status of a member or eligible person in
accordance with the area's standards of medical
practice.
Medicare Risk Contract
— A contract between a managed care plan and HCFA to
provide services to Medicare beneficiaries for a
fixed monthly payment. Requires all services to be
provided on an at-risk basis.
Medicare Supplement —
Voluntary private insurance coverage purchased by
Medicare enrollees covering the cost of services not
reimbursed by Medicare.
Member — Enrollee,
beneficiary, insured. Includes those enrolled or
subscribed to a health insurance plan and their
eligible dependents.
Morbidity - Sickness
— A morbidity table shows the incidence of
occurrence of sickness.
Morbidity Rate —
Actuarial term for the likelihood of medical
expenses occurring.
Mortality - Death — A
mortality table shows the incidence of occurrence of
death.
Multi-Specialty Group
— A group of doctors representing various medical
specialties working together.
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NNN
NAIC — National
Association of Insurance Commissioners. An
association of state insurance commissioners, active
in discussions of regulatory problems and in the
formation and recommendation of uniform practices
and legislation.
NALU — National
Association of Life Underwriters. An organization of
life insurance agents having state and local
associations throughout the country.
NFIP — A government
program offered by the U.S. government's Federal
Emergency Management Administration. The National
Flood Insurance Program is able to pool policy
premiums throughout the United States. With the full
faith and credit of the Federal Government it can
offer reasonable rates for flood damage coverage.
NCQA — National
Committee for Quality Assurance. A non-profit
organization created to improve patient care and
health plan performance in partnership with managed
care plans, purchasers, consumers and the public
sector.
Network Model HMO —
An HMO that contracts with two or more independent
group practices to provide health services. Solo
practices may be included, but it is primarily
organized around groups. This HMO model is commonly
used by HCSCs.
Non-Forfeiture Values
— Those values in a life (or health, including
long-term care) insurance policy that the policy
owner does not forfeit even if he ceases to pay
premiums: cash value, loan value, paid-up value, or
extended term value.
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OOO
Open Enrollment — A
period of time when eligible subscribers may enroll
in, or transfer between available programs providing
health care coverage. Federal HMO regulations
require that HMOs which meet certain criteria
conduct annual open enrollments for periods of not
less than 30 days.
Open Panel — Private
physicians contract with a plan to provide care in
their own offices.
Ordinary Life — (1)
All life insurance policies not classifiable as
Industrial or Group. (2) A continuous premium, whole
life policy (also sometimes called Straight Life).
Outcomes Management —
The result of a medical or surgical intervention. It
is thought that a database of outcomes experience
can give caregivers a better understanding of which
treatments consistently result in better outcomes
for patients. Outcomes management may lead to
development of clinical protocols.
Outlier — In an HMO's
utilization review: one who does not fall within the
norm, using either too many or too few services.
Anyone whose utilization differs two standard
deviations from the mean on a bell curve is termed
an "outlier." Also used to describe a patient who
varies significantly from other patients, such as a
longer or shorter length of stay, leaving against
medical advice, etc.
Out-of-Area Benefits
— Coverage allowed to managed care plan members for
emergency situations if temporarily outside their
HMO or MCO's prescribed service area.
Out-of-Area Services
— Services received by insurance plan enrollees when
they are outside their plan's established geographic
area of service as defined in the contract and
service agreement. Usually not covered unless a
delay would adversely affect the member's health.
Outpatient Services —
Medical and other services provided by a hospital or
other qualified facility, such as a mental health
clinic, rural health clinic, mobile X-ray unit or
free-standing dialysis unit. Those services include
physical therapy, diagnostic X-ray and laboratory
tests.
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PPP
Paid-Up — Life
insurance on which all premiums have been paid but
that has not yet matured by death or endowment, such
as LIMITED PAYMENT policy on which the
premium-paying period has been completed or the
insurance paid for by using the cash value under the
paid-up non-forfeiture option.
Participating Provider
— A provider who has contracted with a health care
service contractor, HMO, PPO, IPA or other managed
care organization to provide health care.
Peer Review —
Evaluation of a physician's performance by other
physicians, usually within the same geographic area
and medical specialty.
Performance Standards
— The standards an individual health care provider
is expected to meet to achieve the desired quality
of care. Volume of care also may be covered, e.g.
office hours, office visits per week or month,
on-call days, surgical procedures per year, etc.
Per Member Per Month (PMPM)
— Refers to the cost or revenue from each plan
member for a month. Indicates revenue, expenses or
utilization of services.
Physician-Hospital
Organizations (PHOs) — For-profit or
not-for-profit. Their strength is in their knowledge
of medicine and health, investment in medical
technology and understanding of their communities.
PHOs now face the challenge of realigning financial
incentives and their ability to assume and manage
risk.
PIP — Personal Injury
Protection, part of Washington's 1994 "no fault"
auto insurance law that requires insurers to offer
this coverage, although consumers are not required
to purchase it. It provides coverage for bodily
injury, loss of wages, burial expenses and for
household services expenses.
Point-of-Service Plan (POS)
— Incorporates features of both HMOs and PPOs,
encouraging but not requiring members to choose a
primary care physician. As in HMOs, primary care
physicians act as "gatekeepers" to other health care
services. However, members may visit non-network
providers, but pay higher deductibles and
copayments.
Policy Dividend — The
return of the overcharge in a participating premium.
It represents the difference between the premium
charged and actual experience.
Policyholder —
Literally, the person who has possession of the
policy. Thus the term is non-functional as commonly
used. (See comment under INSURED.)
Policy Owner — The
person who has the right to exercise the rights and
privileges in the policy contract. Such person may
or may not be the insured, depending on policy
ownership and assignment, if any.
Pooling — Combining
risk.
Practice Parameters —
Strategies for patient management developed to
assist physicians in clinical decision-making.
Practice parameters may also be called practice
options, practice guidelines, practice policies or
practice standards. (American Medical Association
definition)
Preauthorization — A
method to monitor and control utilization of a
medical service by evaluating need prior to it being
performed.
Preadmission Review —
Review of claims for inpatient admission prior to
hospital admission in order to assure medical
necessity.
Pre-Existing Condition
— A condition of health or physical condition that
existed before the policy was issued. Prior to 1993,
insurance coverage was denied or significantly
delayed on the basis of pre-existing conditions. In
Washington state, however, carriers cannot use
health screening to reject applications, and the
only waiting periods allowed may be no more than
nine months for a condition treated in the previous
six months.
Preferred Provider
Organization (PPO) — A health care
arrangement between purchasers of care such as
employers and insurance companies and providers
offering benefits at a reasonable cost using
incentives, such as lower deductibles and copays to
get members to use providers within a network. Use
of non-preferred physicians would involve a higher
cost. Preferred providers must agree to specified
fee schedules and are required to comply with
certain utilization and review guidelines.
Preferred Risk — An
insurance classification indicating a risk that is
superior to the average risk on which the rate has
been calculated. They are usually eligible for a
reduced rate.
Premium — (1) Part of
the consideration for the insurance, by whatever
name called. (2) The periodic payment made to keep a
policy in force. Premium and rate are sometimes
incorrectly used interchangeably. Technically, rate
is the amount charged for a given unit of insurance
coverage, and premium is the sum of the unit rates
for a given policy. (3) In annuities, the purchase
payment.
Pre-Paid Hospital Service
Plan — The common name for Health Maintenance
Organization plan (HMO). It provides comprehensive
health care, usually by salaried personnel, for
members who pay a flat fee for the services, whether
out-patient or hospital treatment is needed.
Prescription Benefit
Managers (PBMs) — Monitor prescription claims
for managed care organizations, tracking the drugs
and volumes of pharmaceuticals are prescribed by the
plan's participating physicians.
Primary Care —
Primary Care is the first care a patient receives.
It is often a family physician, although patients
also may receive Primary Care from a nurse, a
paramedic, or other types of health-care providers,
depending on the situation. Managed care systems try
to resolve as many health problems as possible at
this level.
Prior Authorization —
Managed care procedure to control utilization of
services by review and approval of a medical
service. See also preauthorization.
Producer — Term
commonly applied to an agent, solicitor, or other
person who sells insurance, producing business for
the company and for a commission (if so paid) for
himself.
Progressive Rates — A
method health plans use to implement new rates
either monthly, quarterly or semiannually. New or
renewing subscribers or groups with anniversaries
falling within such periods are automatically
subject to prevailing rates in effect during those
periods. These rates are generally guaranteed for
the full 12 months benefit year. This rate is said
to offer greater rate parity than a fixed rate
throughout the fiscal year.
Proof of Loss — A
formal statement made by the insured to the
insurance company regarding a loss. The purpose of
the proof of loss is to place before the company
sufficient information concerning the loss to enable
it to determine its liability under the policy or
bond.
Pro Rata — (1)
Distribution of the amount of insurance in one
policy, among the several objects or places covered,
in proportion to their value or to the amounts
shown. (2) The distribution of liability among the
several insurance companies having policies on the
risk.
Providers —
Institutions and individuals licensed to provide
health care services (e.g. hospitals, physicians,
naturopaths, medical health clinicians, pharmacists,
etc.)
QQQ
Quality Assurance —
Internal peer review process used to audit the
quality of care provided. Should include an
educational mechanism identifying and preventing
discrepancies in care.
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RRR
Rating Bands — Limits
the difference between lowest and highest premium
rates charged to a pool of groups or individual
subscribers.
Rating Bureau — An
organization that classifies and promulgates rates
and in some cases compiles data and measures hazards
of individual risks in term of rates in a given
territory.
Rebate — Giving to
the policy owner some part of the agent's commission
(or something of value) as in inducement to buy.
This is an illegal action.
Reinsurance —
Insurance for insurers. A contract transferring all
or part of a risk or liability already covered under
an existing contract. Allows an insurer to protect
itself against part or all of the losses incurred
when honoring all the claims of its members or
subscribers. Also referred to as "stop loss."
Replacement Cost —
The cost of replacing property without deduction for
depreciation.
Reserves — Restricted
cash investments or highly liquid investments
intended to protect the MCO against insolvency or
bankruptcy.
Rider — An amendment
attached to a policy that modifies the conditions of
the policy by expanding or decreasing its benefits
or excluding certain conditions from coverage.
Risk — (1) A chance
of loss. (2) A person or thing insured (Impaired or
substandard risk: An applicant whose physical
condition or driving habits/record does not meet the
standard on which the rate is based.)
Risk Pool — A pool of
money to be used for defined expenses. Commonly, if
the money put at risk is not expended by the end of
the year, some or all of it is returned to those
managing the risk.
Risk Sharing — Method
used by MCO and contracted provider to divide
responsibility for financial risk and rewards
involved in caring for a plan's members and assigned
to a specific provider.
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SSS
Schedule — (1) A list
of specified amounts payable for, usually, surgical
procedure, dismemberments, ancillary expenses or the
like in HEALTH INSURANCE policies. (2) The list of
individual items covered under one policy as the
various buildings, animals and other property in
PROPERTY INSURANCE or the list of rings, bracelets,
etc., insured under a JEWELRY floater.
Self-insurance — The
practice of an employer or organization assuming
responsibility for the health care losses of its
employees. Usually a fund is established against
which claims payments are drawn. Claims processing
is often handled through and administrative services
contract with an independent organization, usually
an insurer.
SHIBA — Statewide
Health Insurance Benefits Advisors program created
in 1979 initially to assist senior citizens and
other Medicare beneficiaries with health insurance
issues at no charge. Now with a broader focus to
assist health insurance consumers statewide, using a
corps of trained volunteers supported by OIC staff
and sponsored by local community-based
organizations.
Single Payer — This
system of health coverage would enroll all Americans
in a government-run program financed by taxes. This
plan was scrapped when overall health-care reforms
were considered at the federal level in the early
1990s, but bills that would implement a single-payer
system remain alive in Congress.
Special Limits —
Refers to limitation in a homeowner's policy placed
on losses for specific items of property, such as
gold and silver bullion, currency, securities,
letters of credit, manuscripts, passports, tickets,
stamps, boats, trailers, firearms and silver and
goldware. To obtain full coverage, additional
coverage must be purchased.
Staff Model HMO — A
health maintenance organization providing health
services from a group of physicians who are either
staff employees of a professional group practice
which is an integral part of the HMO plan or are
direct employees of the HMO itself. Physicians in
staff model HMOs are usually prohibited from
providing fee-for-service care.
Stop Loss — That
point when a third party has reinsurance to protect
against an overly large single claim or excessively
high aggregate claims during a given period of time.
Large employers who are self-insured may also
purchase reinsurance for stop loss purposes. See
reinsurance.
Subrogation —
Requires an insured person to assign any rights to
recover damages to his insurer.
Surplus Line —
Coverage procured in an unlicensed insurance company
because of its unavailability from an insurance
company licensed in the state.
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TTT
Term — (1) Relating
to a contract of health insurance that makes no
provision for renewal or termination other than by
expiration of the policy term. (2) Life insurance
issued for a term of years, after which it expires
without value. (3) The period for which the coverage
runs, which is usually the period for which the
premium is paid in a HEALTH INSURANCE policy.
Usually used as policy term.
Third-Party Administrator
(TPA) — An individual or company contracting
with employers who want to pay the cost of providing
healthcare for their employees. TPAs develop and
coordinate self-insurance programs, process and pay
claims, may help locate stop loss insurance for the
employer. They also can analyze the effectiveness of
the plan and utilization of its benefits.
UUU
Underwriter — (1) A
person trained in evaluating risks and determining
what rates and coverages that will be used for them.
(2) An agent, especially a life insurance agent, who
might qualify as a "field underwriter." In theory,
the agent is supposed to do some underwriting before
submitting the case to the home office. Underwriter:
i.e., to make a decision on the basis of facts known
on whether or not the risk is sound and to report
all facts known that might affect the rate.
UIM — Underinsured
motorist coverage must be offered by automobile
insurance companies as part of an auto insurance
policy. Consumers who do not want the coverage must
sign a waiver. This coverage protects an insured
driver from losses that should have been the
responsibility of another driver, but which are not
covered at all, or not fully covered by the other
driver's insurance.
Underwriting Loss —
When the cost of providing medical services, plus
overhead, exceeds premium income, or the amount of
incurred losses and expenses exceeds earned premium.
Unearned Premium —
That portion of an advance premium payment that has
not yet been used for coverage written. Thus in the
case of an annual premium, at the end of the first
month of the premium period, 11 months of the
premium would still be "unearned, etc."
Usual, Customary and
Reasonable (UCR) — Health insurance plans pay
a physician's full charge if it is deemed reasonable
and does not exceed his or her usual charges and
amount customarily charged by other physicians
practicing in the area for the service.
Utilization —
Patterns of use of a service or type of service
within a specified time. Usually expressed in rate
per unit of population-at-risk for a given period.
Utilization experience multiplied by the average
cost per unit of service delivered equals capitated
costs.
Utilization Review (UR)
— A systematic means to review and control patients'
use of medical care services as well as the
appropriateness and quality of that care. Usually
involves data collection, review and/or
authorization, especially for services such as
specialists, emergency room use and hospitalization.
Also known as utilization management or control.
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WWW
Waiting Period — A
period of time between the beginning of a disability
and the date benefits begin. In Washington state,
health insurance waiting periods are limited to 90
days.
Waiver — (1) A rider
waiving (excluding) liability for a stated cause of
accident or (especially) sickness. (2) Provision or
rider agreeing to waive (forego) premium payment
during a period of disability. (3) The giving up or
surrender of a right or privilege that is known to
exist. It may be effected by the agent, adjuster, or
insurance company employee or official orally or in
writing.
Withhold — The
portion of the fee or monthly capitation payment to
the provider that is held back by the MCO until the
cost of referral for hospital services has been
determined. A provider who exceeds utilization norms
does not receive the withheld amount. The amount
returned depends on the individual utilization by
the provider, referral patterns through the year,
groups of physicians or the overall plan pool, and
financial indicators for the overall capitated plan.
Whole Life — A life
insurance policy that runs for the whole life - that
is, until death (except that it will pay the face
amount at the ultimate age on the mortality table
being used because, as far as that table goes, that
age is death for all surviving insureds). Premiums
for a WHOLE LIFE policy may be paid for the whole
life or for a limited period during which the higher
premium charged pays up the policy.
Write — In insurance
terms, to insure. It also means, to underwrite or to
sell.
NOTE: Most of the
terms, explanations and definitions in this flyer
were taken from various insurance industry guides,
reference books, dictionaries and the Commission on
Insurance Terminology, a group that tries to bring
consistency to the use of many of these terms.
Language and its use does not remain static.
Meanings and word usage can change over the years
and from region to region. We do not intend this to
be a final statement on what various words mean, but
hope it will help the average person better
understand insurance.