Hi all,
I have often thought in the past as to why it is becoming mandatory to have extreme levels of professional indemnity insurance. Where are people getting the information to foresee what level of cover is deemed a "minimum requirement"? I have tried to find some studies which look at the last 15 years of claims against physical therapists to attempt to further understand this issue. (see attached).
The CNA/HPSO group 2001-2010 Physical Therapy Liability survey (which disregards any settlement under $10,000, being 3337 of the 3889 claims) shows us the average claim to be $79,471. If we include the claims under 10,000 this works out to be approximately $18327 (assuming those claims were ALL $9999, realistically they would have been less). The HIGHEST single claim I could find anywhere on the internet which was successfully settled comes from this study - a paralysis which ended up at 1 Million falling under a "total permanent disability" category.
This article is heavily biased and skews wording / information to highlight the severe end of the spectrum as noted by the regular outlining of the worst recorded cases between informative sections. No wonder as it has been undertaken and backed by an insurance body (and that they have it as a banner on top of their money laundering website, sorry I mean insurance website). So I am quite confident the numbers are probably even lower (potentially didn't include cases which lower the average etc. for undetermined reasons).
The second article is again by the CNA/HPSO group and outlines similar figures, it does show an approximate 9% upward trend of insurance claims from 1995-2004 which is useful for determining the current appropriate cover required.
So how much are you covered for? $10,000,000? $20,00,000? Do you insure your car for 100 times it's value and pay exuberant premiums? I understand that we should be covered for the highest LIKELY claim in the unlikely event of a lawsuit, however are 5 cases in the last 15 years from near 10,000 lawsuits which actually received a 6 digit figure (let alone 1 case receiving a 7 figure pay out) justify our huge indemnity cover? And why is 20,000,000 more expensive than 10,000,000, when in the history of professional indemnity insurance for physiotherapists there has never been a recorded claim in which this was a factor?
I am not saying that we shouldn't be insured! I am just curious as to why organisations are requesting their clinicians have 10 or 20 million as a minimum requirement. Our own regulatory body has no identified minimum for registration, only that a clinician HAS indemnity cover.
Please feel free to do your own research. I couldn't find reliable information for Australian statistics or anything for the last 2-3 years. Also I specifically was after physical therapy claims, not medical claims (of which I am sure there is a much larger top out on claim settlements).
Let me know what you think!
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Meant Highest POTENTIAL claim, not highest likely.
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