The Greater Whole
In the
past, fraudsters have taken advantage of individual insurers who opted
to piece together suspicious claims in isolation. A new initiative,
however, is based on the whole being greater than the sum of its parts,
bringing insurers together and pooling their data.
Who
benefits when the property and casualty insurance industry effectively
fights organized fraud? Certainly, individual insurers save money,
allowing regulators and law enforcement agencies to allocate resources
to other areas. But the real beneficiaries are honest Canadians who pay
their insurance premiums and want the abuse and associated costs
eliminated from the system.
The fact is that organized criminals do not care what rules,
regulations or laws are in place; they simply identify the easiest
target. It is also clear that auto insurance fraud is big business in
Canada. Nowhere is this truer than in Ontario, where, KPMG reports, as
much as $1.6 billion per year is paid by insurance companies to cover
fraudulent claims. This systemic abuse affects every single driver in
the province.
Insurers, regulators and consumers find this unacceptable and, in
response, the industry is increasingly looking at cost-effective ways to
fight organized crime. The more insurers can prevent premeditated fraud
across companies, the better. Data pooling is the key to fighting this
kind of crime and it is the simple principle behind the formation of
CANATICS, or Canadian National Insurance Crime Services.
CONNECTING THE DOTS
CANATICS represents a game changer in the fight against insurance
fraud. Instead of an insurance company having only one, limited view of
suspicious claims activity, now the industry can connect the dots and
identify patterns of organized fraud. This will empower individual
insurers to act on information and pursue organized criminals to the
fullest extent of the law.
This concept may be new to Canada, but it is proven elsewhere. For
example, the Insurance Fraud Bureau in the United Kingdom and the
National Insurance Crime Bureau in the United States have been using
collective industry data for years to show patterns of organized fraud
activity. CANATICS will employ the same information-intensive fight on
fraud.
The final report of the Ontario Automobile Insurance Anti-Fraud Task
Force, released in November 2012, recommended that "insurers should move
aggressively to establish an organization that would pool and analyze
claims data in order to identify potential cases of organized and
premeditated fraud."
While CANATICS was incorporated in January 2013, the work behind it
has been years in the making. It started as the Insurance Fraud Group in
Ontario and involved an extensive, successful proof of concept phase.
With that foundation in place, CANATICS now has nine member insurance
companies representing 70% of all auto insurance direct written premiums
(DWP) in Ontario, or approximately 40% of market share on a national
basis.
Membership is open to all insurers and the organization is committed
to keeping the barriers to entry as low as possible for companies of all
sizes.
The mission is to combat insurance crime for the benefit of all
Canadians. It is a simple formula, but complex in its delivery. The idea
is to provide individual insurers with superior intelligence derived
from analytics performed on industry-pooled data, with an unwavering
focus on data quality, privacy and security.
It is crucial to note that CANATICS is focused on organized and
premeditated fraud, which involves rings, organized schemes and patterns
of fraudulent activity. It is equally important to note what CANATICS
is not. It is not an investigative body and will not collect evidence
and build cases for prosecution.
Similarly, the organization is not an industry database or
clearinghouse of information. Information will be pooled, but
identifiable information will not be shared across insurance companies.
In this sense, CANATICS acts as a consortium for industry-wide fraud
network analysis.
CANATICS will provide "alerts" to insurance companies when patterns
are detected through sophisticated, leading-edge data analytics. These
alerts, consisting of a computer-generated linkage report detailing the
specifics of suspicious claims, will serve as the basis for
investigations, not for decisions. The individual insurance company
decides how it wants to pursue the suspicious leads.
The alerts give insurers the thread and line it up with the needle;
it is up to the insurer to follow the thread and see where it leads.
EMBRACING DATA ANALYTICS
The industry-wide view of data is critical. In the last five years,
insurance companies have embraced a wide range of data analytics for
fraud detection, including anomaly detection, predictive modelling and
fraud network analysis.
While individual methods of data analysis are effective, the
cumulative value of all methods together is significant. When insurers
collaborate, the effect of the data analysis is greatly improved. Think
of it as the difference between looking through a keyhole versus viewing
a panorama.
With pooled data, inter-relationships between potential suspicious
claims and the correlations across insurance companies can be seen. In
fact, this pooling of data will provide more information on trends and
suspicious activity than has ever been available.
That said, protecting privacy is paramount. Privacy measures include
educating consumers on the benefits of the use of personal information
and industry-wide data analysis for fraud detection in order to reduce
premeditated and organized fraud and its effect on them.
CANATICS operations and those of its members are designed to be
compliant with applicable laws and regulations, particularly the federal
Personal Information and Protection of Electronic Documents Act, and
corresponding provincial legislation.
This high standard is reflected in the CANATICS model of privacy by
design. It is built right into the development of the organization. That
means only the data needed to support fraud detection through analytics
will be collected and appropriate consent will be obtained.
Representatives for CANATICS are working with regulators and federal/
provincial privacy commissions to enhance the already-strong consent
language in place through standard auto insurance applications.
NO ACCESS
As mentioned, industry data is pooled, not shared. Members will not
be able to see any personally identifiable information from other
insurers. CANATICS is the processor, not the owner, of the data.
In this role, leading industry practices (including standards
compliance with and adoption of privacy by design principles advocated
by the Ontario Information and Privacy Commissioner) will be used to
secure data and prevent unauthorized access, disclosure, copying, use or
modification of data. Information will be stored at a secure data
centre in Canada.
With these and other safeguards in place, CANATICS shows promise that
it is poised to make a huge difference in fraud detection in the
p&c insurance industry when it eventually goes live. New members are
welcome, as this
will serve to widen the view of pooled industry data.
There is the very real potential of expanding to other provinces and
growing from a representation of approximately $8.5 billion in Ontario
auto insurance DWP to more than $20 billion in DWP across Canada.
MORE POSSIBILITIES
There is also the possibility of extending collaborative data
analytics to other areas, such as life and health insurance benefits.
The reality is that this line of business shares many of the same data
entities and relationships as auto insurance, particularly accident
benefits and bodily injury.
In fact, there are opportunities to leverage the pooled data approach
to areas outside of general insurance, including workers' compensation.
The avenues for growth are ripe with potential in the months and years
ahead.
A collaborative approach is the best way to reduce the costs
associated with systemic insurance fraud. This will help the industry,
but just as importantly, it will benefit the millions of honest
policyholders who pay their premiums and expect a fair and efficient
auto insurance system.
Source: By: Ben Kosic, Chief Executive Officer, CANATICS
2014-01-01 http://www.canadianunderwriter.ca/news/the-greater-whole/1002876486/?type=Print%20Archives
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