-
Rochester, N.Y. - Corporate executives worry most about data security and terrorism, according to survey results from Rochester, N.Y.-based Harris Interactive Inc. Harris Interactive asked senior executives of large corporations ($1 billion plus revenue) to share their worries about typical crisis situations. And 61% named compromise of corporate information system one of their biggest worries.Data breaches drew a number of headlines in 2006. Security experts report that high-profile data breaches, growing sophistication among cyber criminals, increased media attention and unprecedented legislative activity have changed perceptions and practices around identity theft in 2006.
January 5 -
Atlanta - Although the life insurance industry is predicted to experience flat to modest growth in 2007, insurance carriers may do well to consider technological tools that will help them prepare for the imminent retirement of many Baby Boomers, according to Atlanta-based LOMA, an international insurance association.The prediction comes from LOMA’s Resource magazine, which published its annual forecast by the LOMA board of directors. The LOMA board of directors is composed of chairmen, presidents, CEOs and other top executives of leading insurance and financial services companies in the United States, Canada and internationally.
January 5 -
Dublin, Ireland – Many of the services required by businesses including human resources, billing and transactional processing, may be entirely peripheral to its core competencies, according to research from Dublin, Ireland-based Research and Markets. Using a business process outsourcing (BPO) provider can help reduce costs while at the same time allowing the enterprise to focus on its core business.
January 4 -
Philadelphia - CIGNA Corp. redesigned its flagship public Web site to be easier for users to navigate and offer users extensive health information and online resources in a newly added Health & Money section.
January 3 -
Des Plaines, Ill. - Regulatory modernization, a long-term terrorism insurance solution and the Florida property market are top-of-mind issues the insurance industry will address in 2007, according to the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America (PCI).
January 2 -
INSURER ENHANCES ONLINE DATAThe Empire Life Insurance Company (Empire Life) enhanced Trilogy, its universal life product that continues to evolve to meet the changing financial and wealth management needs of Canadians. The enhancements represent the largest number of revisions to the product since Trilogy Universal Life was introduced in September 2000. Better delivery of information is achieved through a completely revised client statement and with new online investment information.
January 1 -
RECORDING SOFTWAREWitness Systems Inc., a Roswell, Ga.-based global provider of workforce optimization software and services, enhanced its Impact 360 IP Recording solution, featuring tripled channel capacity, unified recording management and a centralized administration tool. Designed for interactions in enterprise and contact center environments, Impact 360 now features TDM and IP recording under a single management tool. The software operates across IP, TDM and mixed telephony networks, designed to help customers ensure all their calls are recorded, whether for compliance and liability, sales verification or quality assurance purposes. Impact 360 IP Recording allows the recording of SIP-based calls. Also new to Impact 360 IP Recording is tripled channel capacity, which results in fewer servers. The solution introduces centralized administration capabilities, which provide access to all the vital Impact 360 IP Recording configuration settings, enabling customers to centrally manage all of their Impact 360 recorders regardless of location.
January 1 -
GRAIN DEALERS UPGRADE POLICY ADMIN CAPABILITIESGrain Dealers Mutual Insurance Co. upgraded its policy administration capabilities with Policy Decisions from Insurity, a Hartford, Conn.-based ChoicePoint company. Policy Decisions is designed to incorporate complete policy-lifecycle administration services-from application intake to rating and underwriting, from policy issuance to renewal and reinsurance-on a single Web services platform. Grain Dealers looked at competing systems that promised improved access, says David Patterson, assistant vice president and director of Information Services for the Indianapolis-based property-casualty insurer, but Insurity had several advantages that clinched the deal. At first, agents will access it to do their own quoting for commercial policies. The longer-term plan is to provide self-service access to agents for policy maintenance.
January 1 -
Washington - Two conservative Fox News commentators, Bill O’Reilly and Morton Kondracke, are slated to speak at insurance industry conferences in the coming year.
December 29 -
Washington - A third conference in the movement to start a standards-based nationwide health information network (NHIN) is expected to include demonstrations of health information exchange prototypes and discussion of business models.
December 28 -
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – The nation may remember 2006 as the year the Democrats won the mid-term elections, Gerald Ford and James Brown died, and data breaches made an indelible mark on American business in general and the insurance industry in particular.
December 27 -
Thousand Oaks, Calif. - To promote health in the Latino community, Blue Cross of California (BCC) has started a Web site called NuestroBien, which is Spanish for ”our well being." The site, located at www.nuestrobien.com, presents articles in English and Spanish on prevention, nutrition and early detection of health problems.
December 26 -
Harrisburg, Pa. - Pennsylvania National Mutual Casualty Insurance Co. enhanced its online quoting and application system for personal lines products, as part of its strategy to jump-start profitable personal lines growth.Some of the technology enhancements include quick-hit automation and workflow improvements, including automatically ordering Insurance Bureau Score reports, automatically assigning plan tiering and simplifying and streamlining the application process by eliminating duplication. In addition, product enhancements include streamlining auto and homeowner underwriting guidelines to make them easier to use and less cumbersome, and revising underwriting guidelines to broaden underwriting appetite for selected risks to be more competitive.
December 22 -
Chicago - Chicago-based insurance broker Aon yesterday became the latest in a series of companies to participate in technology mergers as it announced its intent to acquire Valley Oak Systems (VOS), a San Ramon, Calif., provider of claims management software, services and support for the insurance industry. The acquisition reflects Aon’s desire to supplement its risk management portfolio. Valley Oak, winner of the IASA 2006 Technology Achievement Award, is best known for its iVOS system, which includes medical bill review, policy underwriting, case management, billing and event management capabilities. "Aon's acquisition of Valley Oak Systems continues Celent's predicted roll-up of the insurance software industry,” says Donald Light, senior analyst with Boston-based Celent, LLC. “While most acquisitions of independent insurance software vendors have been by larger software vendors, such as Milwaukee-based Fiserv buying Insureworx, Oakland, Calif., this time it is a major broker doing the deal.” The purchase InsureWorx, a policy and claims administration technology provider, gives Fiserv an end-to-end policy and claims administration offering for workers compensation. Other recent mergers in the insurance technology space include the San Diego-based Websense Inc., acquisition of PortAuthority Technologies, Inc., Palo Alto, Calif., and Ra'anana, Israel, for approximately $90 million in cash. PortAuthority will combine its information leak prevention technology with the "ThreatSeeker" malicious content identification and categorization technology from Websense. The deal will create a single source for companies looking to prevent the unauthorized use or disclosure of confidential data while simultaneously protecting users and data from external malicious threats. The Aon-VOS merger will benefit Aon’s unique position as a large brokerage firm. By integrating and sharing data with RiskConsole, Aon’s RMIX offering, the Aon-VOS deal enables the Chicago broker to create what the companies claim to be the only end-to-end browser-based offering in the marketplace. The acquisition of VOS follows a similar deal cut in 2004 by Aon’s with Risk Laboratories, LLC (RiskLabs), Marietta, Ga. Aon expects to consummate the VOS deal by January 31, 2007. Light believes that, from a marketing and sales perspective, the acquisition makes sense. “Valley Oak's customer base includes a great many risk management units in large employers who self-insure workers' compensation,” he says. “Aon's brokerage business targets that same group of risk managers. Aon's challenge will be to give Valley Oak the resources and freedom to keep its offering fresh and valuable to self-insured employers, as well as other customers such as insurers and third party administrators." Sources: Aon, Celent, INN archives
December 21 -
Dallas – Boston-based Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts (BCBSMA) has decided to use Premium Payor Services from Zix Corp. (ZixCorp). ZixCorp's Premium Payor Services provide access to future value-added services and deliver enhanced reporting for both payors and providers, aiding in analysis for incentive program initiatives.The Premium Payor Services funding model, which is in addition to the annual subscription fee per prescriber, is typically one dollar per qualified script processed or, as in this case, a flat fee license based on historical usage patterns calibrated to yield a similar amount.
December 20 -
Indianapolis - WellPoint Inc. received three eHealthcare Leadership Awards for two of its branded product Web sites.WellPoint, based in Indianapolis, received a Platinum award in the Best Overall Internet Site category for www.bluecrossca.com, a Silver award in the Best eBusiness Site category for www.anthem.com and a Distinction award in the Best Health/Healthcare Content category for www.anthem.com. The company's Web sites were selected from more than 1,100 award entries.
December 19 -
New York - Eliot Spitzer of New York nominated Eric Dinallo, General Counsel of Willis Group Holdings, to serve as New York State Insurance Superintendent in the new administration.Dinallo, 43, will replace Howard Mills, who was appointed in 2004 by Republican Governor George Pataki. In 2003 Dinallo resigned as chief of Spitzer's Investment Protection Bureau to become head of regulatory matters for Morgan Stanley, and was hired as general counsel for insurance broker Willis Group Holdings Ltd. in March.
December 18 -
Harleysville, Pa. – Harleysville Insurance Inc. has appointed Jonathan Griggs as vice president of insurance management systems, and named Brahm Sharma as vice president of resource management.
December 15 -
Washington - America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) and the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association (BCBSA) are working together to grant consumers their wish for portable personal health records (PHRs).
December 15 -
Naperville, Ill. - The thieves who made off with computer tapes containing the names and Social Security numbers of 130,000 Aetna Inc. customers appear unlikely to exploit the information, the Hartford, Conn.-based health insurer says. "There is no indication that data theft was targeted," Aetna says. Aetna announced yesterday that a lockbox containing the computer back-up tapes was stolen in late October from the Naperville, Ill., satellite office of a vendor, Addison, Texas-based Concentra Preferred Systems. Concentra audits medical clams and performs other cost containment services for insurers, and the tapes contained information on customers of "several" other undisclosed carriers, according to published reports. Information on an undetermined number of WellPoint Inc. customers may have been stolen in the burglary, reports say. "We believe the total number is an extremely small percentage of our membership," a spokesman for Indianapolis-based WellPoint says. In a report on the incident, Aetna quotes law enforcement officials who say the burglars also stole cash, pharmaceuticals, DVDs and movie passes, and did not appear to be looking for information to use in fraudulent schemes. The law enforcement agency characterized the perpetrators as "common thieves" looking for cash and other property to pawn. The thieves forced their way into the space occupied by Concentra, as well as the offices of five other businesses in the suburban Chicago building, Aetna says. Property was taken from all the tenants. Concentra officials, who notified Aetna of the loss on Nov. 3, say retrieving the data from the tapes would require a complex combination of commercial equipment and specialized software. The data was stored in unlabeled, difficult-to-understand formats, Concentra says. "These tapes cannot be used on a standard PC," Concetra officials say. Concentra reconstructed the data on the tapes and turned it over to Aetna on Nov. 10. Aetna's IT team worked around the clock to determine what information was stolen. They found the data included member names, hospital codes and either Social Security numbers or Aetna ID numbers for about 130,000 people. The names and Social Security numbers of about 750 medical workers were also on the tapes. Aetna is apologizing and notifying members and providers whose personal information was on the tapes. The insurer also is arranging free credit monitoring to help detect any misuse of the information. Concentra is offering a $10,000 reward in connection with the theft, according to published reports. Source: Aetna Inc.
December 14