Study 9: Insurance Fraud Management in Canadian Society - Summary (Part 2) Flashcards
Fraud reporting mechanisms
An insurance professional who suspects fraud should collect critical information from emails, voicemails, audio recordings, photographs, video messages, and other documentation to support the suspicion.
Examples of helpful documentation
- Claim forms (proof of loss, non-waiver, and so on)
- Estimates
- Financial transaction records
- Invoices
- Medical reports
- Photographs
- Work orders
Insurance professionals can choose to report fraud through one or more of the following mechanisms
- Filing a report with a local law enforcement agency or the provincial or territorial Crime Stoppers organization
- Providing anonymous tips through calls to 1-877-IBC-TIPS (422-8477) or completing online tip forms
- Contacting an IBC consumer information officer
- Alerting the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre
- Reporting to a professional college or association
Stakeholder codes of conduct
- Stakeholder: a party with some interest in the business, can be affected by or affect business operations
- Codes of conduct can help stakeholders know what actions to take when a fraud occurs
- Codes of conduct eradicate confusion and minimize fraud
Difference between a code of conduct and a code of ethics
- Code of ethics: general guidelines and values
- Code of conduct: rules, principles, expected behaviours, and relationships which an organization considers fundamental to its success. Generally more specific than a code of ethics, and includes guidance on how to respond in certain situations.
Role of intermediaries in combating fraud
- Effectively pre-screen and qualify potential applicants
- Conduct accurate claims-history searches
- Ensure clients understand the risk
- Prevent fraud arising from intermediary operations
- Adhere to the code of conduct and code of ethics
Intermediary code of conduct
- Ensure employees are qualified to act in their capacity
- Ensure resources are available to supervise employees
- Put in place mechanisms to resolve conflict of interest
- Have internal control procedures and to protect operations, clients and insurers from financial loss
Underwriters can prevent insurance fraud in the following ways
- Ensure the risk meets the insurer’s risk appetite
- Conduct a proper risk assessment to ensure the risk is desirable
- Maintain ethical standards and practices
- Speak out when fraud is suspected (both internal and external)
Code of conduct for underwriters
- Maintain high standards of integrity, dignity, and fairness in the conduct of business
- Ensure all professional dealings are performed in a prompt, efficient, and effective manner
- Provide high standards of service, exercise due diligence, and use professional judgment
- Avoid conflicts of interest and make adequate disclosure of such interests
- Be responsible for the acts or omissions of employees and intermediaries with respect to the conduct of business
Adjusters can prevent fraud in the following ways
- Actively listen to the insured’s loss details when a claim is presented
- Conduct a proper loss investigation for each claim
- Gather and collect all evidence when fraud is suspected
- Assign the special investigations unit (SIU) to further investigate the loss when fraud is detected
Code of conduct for adjusters
- Promote public confidence in the insurer through fair and consistent dealing
- Provide full disclosure to the insured of coverage for which the policy must respond
- Do not seek or make any secret profit or acquire any financial interest in any matter entrusted to the claims adjuster
- Do not commit any act that reflects negatively on the adjuster’s integrity
- Do not take advantage of a policyholder’s inexperience, lack of education, youth, lack of sophistication, language barrier, or ill health for self-gain
Policyholders are afforded the following rights and responsibilities
- Right to be informed
- Right to timely and transparent claims handling
- Right to complaint resolution
- Right to privacy
- Responsibility to understand their needs
- Responsibility to provide accurate information
- Responsibility to update their information
- Responsibility to report accurate facts
Supplier and vendor codes of conduct include the following
- Obey the laws of the jurisdiction
- Conduct business with integrity
- Keep accurate and honest records
- Honour business obligations
- Treat customers with integrity and respect
Community prevention strategies
- Industry organizations play a significant role in reducing insurance fraud in Canada
- Education programs, ethical standards enforcement, fraud awareness projects, etc.
Four main consumer attitudes towards insurance fraud
- Realists: low tolerance for fraud but realize it happens, do not advocate for strong punishment, believe sometimes it is justified
- Conformists: tolerant of insurance fraud because they believe many people do it, advocate for moderate punishment
- Moralists: least tolerant of fraud, advocate for severe punishment
- Critics: extremely high tolerance for insurance fraud, blame the industry for the problem and feel insurers to not conduct business fairly, advocate for no punishment