Saturday, September 23, 2023

The Disability Insurance “trust gap” Part 2: Actions

 [This is the second part of  a discussion on the Disability Insurance “trust gap”.  It is based on notes and discussions points for sessions in a 4th year Disability Management course on Workplace Insurance and Benefits.  Part 1 explored the reasons for the lack of trust in disability insurance.  Part 2 provides three general suggestions for organization and five practice priorities individual case managers and disability management professionals can use to narrow the trust gap they face in their day-to-day work. ]


In the last post I highlighted the trust gap in the insurance sector and some of its causes in the disability insurance sector.  That sector includes workers’ compensation, group Long Term Disability (LTD), transport accident compensation and rehabilitation among others. This post focuses on what individual case managers, vocational rehabilitation consultants, return-to-work coordinators, and other disability management professionals can to do narrow that gap.  The goal of doing so is to achieve better outcomes for the disabled individuals we serve. 


Minding and mending the insurance trust gap


That trust gap doesn’t make your job as a case manager working in any disability insurance system any easier. Coupled with the complexities of systems, workload demands, and resource issues all knowledge workers face, case managers you must find a way meet the expectations of your own organization and the needs of those you are trying to serve. You may get a lot of advice on how best to do that.  Despite your efforts and the best intentions of insurers, that gap is not going to magically disappear. 



For Organizations:


Ultimately, every disability insurance insurer needs a strategy to narrow the insurance trust gap.  Unfortunately, few organizations bother to measure trust at all. 


Every organization should measure the level of trust stakeholders, claimants, and others have in their organization.  This is particularly important among those seeking benefits.  It is possible for someone who has an accepted claim to still assess their level of trust as low.  It is also likely that those with denied claims will have lower trust, but it is also possible for a denied applicant for benefits to have trust in the processes and reasons for the denial.


It is particularly important to identify and track applications that are driven by other insurers.  It is possible that the efforts of other insurers to leave no other avenue of coverage unexplored may be detrimental to your levels of trust and overall reputation.  Understanding this dynamic is critical to anyt strategy for narrowing the trust gap. 


Compare your organization to others.  This may mean agreeing with competitors, parallel organizations, or industry associations to measure trust in similar ways and with similar regularity.  We know the financial services has a trust deficit;  pinpointing your organization’s particular trust status is essential to developing and implementing a strategy to improve it. 


Narrowing the Disability Insurance “Trust Gap”  for DM professional, Case Managers


Knowing that gap exists means you can do something about it.  How you interact with those you serve can narrow that gap and improve both service and outcomes.  Here are five things you can do every day.  This guidance comes through my interactions with injured workers and disabled clients over the last four decades.  Focusing on these priorities won’t eliminate the trust gap but can help you narrow it on a case-by-case basis. 

Attend

Believe

Communicate Clearly, Concisely

Act with Dispatch, a sense of Urgency

Develop genuine Empathy

Follow through


I’ll expand on each of these ideas but realize these are independent of any corporate initiative.  These priorities are within the power of every case manager, vocational rehab consultant and DM professional in the disability insurance field. 


Attend. 


Attending means more than just showing up to a client meeting, passively listening to them on the phone or skimming the latest medical report.  Yes, your job is complex but just about every job today is complex. The circumstances giving rise to injuries are almost always complicated. 


What injured and disabled clients want is more than a series of random contacts repeatedly asking to be told the same story or continually explain the details that gave rise to the injury.  It is not only frustrating, but it can also be harmful. It may be easier for a new case manager taking over a case to ask the beneficiary to re-tell their story, but this is often just a shortcut to avoid reading the detailed information already on file.


Some insurance organizations have increased caseloads of case managers or transitioned from early and direct service by specialist professionals  to highly systematized, volume-focused, script-driven, front-end generalist  at distant call centers.  Reaching and maintaining contact with a knowledgeable specialist case manager or DM professional is often difficult.  Where part of a segmentation strategy to stream cases to a specialist professional, the upside benefits for the client may be positive.  Unfortunately, these models are sometimes introduced as corporately necessary to address cost or staffing needs and may come at a significant cost to the injured individual seeking help.  Continuity of contact over longer duration disability cases can reduce gaps in understanding and build trust.


Actively listen to your clients.  Wherever possible, reduce handoffs to others.  It you must hand off to someone else, be sure to reflect the client’s situation and concerns fully, preferably personally.  When with a client, that person should be the only person that matters (phones and email alerts should not distract from your attention). 

 

Believe.  


The clients you encounter are overwhelmingly sincere.  Believe them. 


Start with a mindset that people seeking benefits from a social or personal injury insurance plan are sincere and not trying to “rip off” the system.


The incidence of claims fraud across all property and casualty insurance lines in the Americas is estimated at about 1.38%.  [see Reinsurance Group of America, RGA 2017 Global Claims Fraud Survey available at https://www.rgare.com/docs/default-source/knowledge-center-articles/rga-2017-global-claims-fraud-survey-white-paper---final.pdf ]. 


Personal injury insurance and disability plans are not rife with fraud.  A favorite target of the rampant-disability-benefit-fraud myth is the US Social Security Disability Insurance system (SSDI).  Despite spectacular rhetoric about fraud, repeated internal and independent reviews have shown “the level of fraud in the disability program is  less than one percent…”  [see Statement of Carolyn Colvin, Acting Commissioner, Social Security Administration, Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Social Security  of the  Committee on Ways and Means U.S. House of Representative  JANUARY 16, 2014, Serial No. 113-SS09].   


Adjudicating and administering personal insurance cases is not easy. It requires expertise, judicious weighing of evidence and experience and adherence to complex law, policy, jurisprudence, and procedure.  Asking for information is diligence; repeated requests for previously provided information infers disbelief.


Consider the actual necessity of what you are asking and how your request may be received.  Even if your requests are procedurally required, the client’s reaction to yet another request for more medical evidence or medical examinations may be quite different. Your request for more (or, worse, already provided) information may communicate something between skepticism and outright an outright accusation of malingering.  Not a great way to build trust.


Start from a position of belief.  If circumstances or evidence on a particular case lead you away from that position, of course you must act accordingly; know, however, that such cases are rare. 


Communicate clearly, concisely.


We all have insurance policies of one sort of another, but few of us have read the fine print… or, having tried, are often left confused by the nuances of restrictions, exceptions, and exclusions common in almost all insurance plans.


The technical nature of personal injury insurance creates ambiguities and information asymmetries. For someone with a new disabling condition, injury or disease, the whole insurance experience is new and layered on the pain, suffering, and fear that typically come with disability, For the case manager, every new application for benefits is another of many in a very technical, policy and procedure driven system.


The very nature of insurance—the transference of specified risk of loss from the policyholder to the insurer— makes these complexities inevitable. What is not inevitable is the confusion from the way policies and decisions are communicated. It is easy to rely on the direct wording of the law or policy; it is much harder to communicate clearly without excessive reliance on legalese.


Strive for clarity in all your communications—verbal and written. Canned paragraphs and templates are necessarily vague. Be certain your communications apply exactly to your purpose.  If a standard letter does not work well, modify or abandon it in favour of something that better communicates your purpose, decision or needs.


Work with Dispatch.


“The waiting is killing me!” “What’s taking so long?” I’ve heard these exact words countless times. In an age when you can get an insurance quote with a click or keystroke, it is more than ironic that getting a decision on a benefit request can routinely take three to six weeks.


According to one source,

“…these [are the] ideal response times in the insurance industry:

Emails: within an hour

Chat: 5 minutes or less

Live chat: less than a minute

Phone calls: less than 30 seconds”

 

[See The importance of response times in the Insurance Sector (2023 Guide) - timetoreply available at https://timetoreply.com/blog/the-importance-of-response-times-in-the-insurance-sector/ ]

 

There are legitimate reasons for delays in all disability insurance administration; medical and incident reports are not filed on time, critical staff are on vacation or in training, medical diagnostics are hard to access.  The automated mantra of “We are experiencing higher than expected call volumes” is often used to hide staffing issues, system deficiencies, and intentional but undeclared decisions to simply live with delays and subsequent frustrations as the status quo.


Transparency of standards and constant public updating of performance may increase accountability and reduce wait times for decisions and payments.  Few organizations publish this sort of data on a routine and timely basis.


Recently, a disabled employee recovering from a surgery applied for benefits form her private insurer.  After weeks of delay, she received an email request for additional information, which she provided the same day only to receive a response that the adjuster was going away on vacation and would make a decision upon her return. Don’t do that. 


Regardless of the system constraints, you have the power to do your job.  If there is something that needs to be done, do it!  Do it now! 

Empathize

You know authentic empathy when you experience it.  An empathetic person has emotional intelligence—knowing and understanding another person’s perspective.  Fully attending to another is one thing; being able to see the world from their perspective is something else, something every case manager and DM professional should strive to do.


Develop genuine empathy.  I don’t mean sympathy and definitely not pity.  Repeating platitudes like “I hear you” or “I’m sorry” is not what I am talking about.  Empathy is deeply understanding and identifying with the context, emotions, frustrations, and aspirations of another. 

Follow through. 


If you say you will send out a decision letter today, then do so.  Remember, even a negative decision is often essential to access another benefit.  Saying you have made a decision and even telling someone is not enough in most cases.


If you work in DM, HR, or CM for an insurer, you will have to follow the rules of your own organization. Those rules are unlikely to conflict with acting to reduce the frustrations of those seeking their benefit entitlements.  Never be the reason for delay.  If delays are becoming systemic elsewhere in the process, seize the initiative to expedite or resolve the issue.  At a minimum, raise the issue with those who can fix it.


Where there are follow-up or review points in a return-to-work plan, for example, make them explicit, and actively monitor those review points with direct contact with the client. 


Final thoughts


The insurance “trust gap” will be a continuing factor in your work.  The best a professional Case Manager, Disability Management Professional, Adjudicator or Return-to-Work Coordinator can do is to narrow that gap with each new case, each client you encounter.  Focusing on these five themes will help you do just that.   

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