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Stair Stepping Reserves Occurs When Adjusters Ignore Claim Basics

By Rebecca Shafer

Tuesday, June 21, 2011 | 0

By Rebecca Shafer
Amaxx Risks Solutions

Whenever a claim quality auditor or an actuarial auditor sees stair-stepping of workers' compensation reserves, it is immediately either the adjuster is inexperienced or lazy. When the auditor sees numerous small changes in the reserves upward to pay medical bills, or to continue indemnity payments or to cover claim expenses, they have a case of stair stepping reserves. If you draw a graph of the reserves, it looks like a set of steps going up………flat, up, flat, up, flat, up, etc.
 
When the adjuster keeps raising the reserves in relatively small increments to pay bills, indemnity or expenses, a basic principle of accounting is ignored. Sound accounting for an insurance company, or self-insurer, is to set aside the money to meet the financial obligation brought on by the claim against the insurance policy. When the adjuster does not establish the correct reserve, the insurers financial balance sheet is inaccurate, either overstating or understating its assets. With stair-stepping of reserves, the insurer assets are overstated on the balance sheet, as the liabilities – the claim where the reserves are understated – are incorrect.
 
The ultimate cost (also known as total cost) of the workers' compensation claim is the amount that should be shown on the reserves at all times. When the claim is assigned to the adjuster, all the information needed to establish the ultimate cost of the claim is not known to the adjuster, hence there will often be changes in the amount of reserves over the life expectancy of the file. The initial reserves should be based on the adjuster's experience with similar claims, but as facts change – the employee has surgery, the employee's level of disability is greater or lesser than normal, the claimant has co-morbidity issues that lengthen the recovery process, etc. – the reserves should be raised, or lowered, as needed. However, if the adjuster is raising the reserves to pay for this week's medical treatment, and raising the reserves next month to pay for the next doctor's visit, the adjuster is “stair-stepping the reserves."
 
The difference between the adjuster who increases the reserves correctly and the adjuster stair-stepping the reserves is the number of reserve changes. A few well-reasoned and carefully thought out reserve changes is the proper way of making reserve changes.   Many small reserve changes without any thought as to the ultimate value of the claim is stair-stepping the reserves.
 
To avoid stai-stepping the reserves, the adjuster needs to know several things including:      
 
1. The expected recovery time for the employee.
2. The average weekly wage and the indemnity rate (as all indemnity calculations flow from these numbers).
3. The ability of the employer to return the employee to work on modified duty or light duty while they recover from their injury.
4. The approximate cost of the medical procedures the employee will have for the type of injury incurred.
5. The reputation of the medical provider for returning employees to work or keeping them off work.
6. The anticipated level of permanent disability the employee will have.
7. The cost of services for medical case management, legal, and other claim associated cost.
 8. The requirements of the workers compensation statutes where the employee will receive benefits.
 
The claims office will have either an electronic or paper reserve worksheet calculation page where the adjuster can fill in the calculations for each of these items to obtain an accurate projection of the future / ultimate cost of the claim. This will result in the accurate projected value of the claim and the correct amount of money for the adjuster to place in reserve for the claim.   When the adjuster skips the reserve worksheet calculation step, they often end up stair stepping the reserves.
 
Stair stepping of reserves by adjusters should be avoided, and can easily be done by the utilization of the known information about the medical, indemnity and expenses for the individual claim. Proper reserving keeps the insurers financial balance sheet accurate, while stair stepping reserves understates the insurers liability.
 
Rebecca Shafer is president of Amaxx Risks Solutions and writer, speaker, and website publisher. This column was reprinted with her permission from her blog, http://www.ReduceYourWorkersComp.com

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