Accelerated Underwriting and COVID-19: Life Insurance Lessons Learned

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2:  Accelerated underwriting requires an infrastructure that brings together data from disparate sources in an understandable way.

If the collection process is not set up appropriately, underwriters may face a deluge of information, making it difficult to identify relevant data.

Accelerated underwriting, which is designed to evolve, offers a framework for quickening the process of assessing mortality risk for writing policies by adjusting underwriting rules and models.

By setting up a data flow and system that pulls in the information from multiple sources and synthesizes it for underwriter review, alternative data is becoming much more valuable to the underwriting process.

3: Accelerated underwriting should be used only where it makes sense.

Determining the relevance of alternative data could depend on the applicant, life insurance product, insurer’s underwriting appetite and other factors.

The value of an alternative data source varies case by case.

For example, one applicant’s lab records may include a full blood panel, while another person’s may provide only a flu test.

4: Creating guidelines for risk assessment and pricing is necessary to move forward strategically.

Alternative underwriting programs are unique to each insurer, but enough commonalities exist to apply valuable evaluation tools for multiple applications.

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Setting up a more rigorous framework for permanent change starts with observing in-market results to identify programs and program features worth maintaining.

Determining which alternative tools are the most protective and most usable while best serving the market can provide the basis for creating guidelines for risk assessment and pricing.

5: No matter how much underwriting is automated and fine-tuned with additional data and models, underwriters remain critically important.

Live human underwriters can evaluate information and see the big picture for more complex risks like no machine can.

In conclusion, there is nothing like a real-world test to realize an industry’s strengths and weaknesses.

The complications introduced by COVID-19 affirmed that the life insurance industry has the financial strength to withstand a major market disruption, the agility to adapt to an unexpected crisis, and the tools of innovation necessary to better serve its customers in the future.

Catie Muccigrosso is vice president and chief underwriter at Reinsurance Group of America, a life and health reinsurer.