Texas Administrative Code
Title 28 - INSURANCE
Part 1 - TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE
Chapter 3 - LIFE, ACCIDENT, AND HEALTH INSURANCE AND ANNUITIES
Subchapter GG - MINIMUM RESERVE STANDARDS FOR INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP ACCIDENT AND HEALTH INSURANCE
Section 3.7002 - Claim Reserves
Universal Citation: 28 TX Admin Code § 3.7002
Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
(a) General.
(1) Claim reserves are required for all
incurred but unpaid claims on all health insurance policies.
(2) Appropriate claim expense reserves are
required with respect to the estimated expense of settlement of all incurred
but unpaid claims.
(3) All such
reserves for prior valuation years must be tested for adequacy and
reasonableness along the lines of claim runoff schedules in accordance with the
statutory financial statement including consideration of any residual unpaid
liability.
(4) Claim reserves for
single premium credit accident and health insurance contracts issued on or
after January 1, 2009, must comply with the claim reserve requirements in this
section. Claim reserves for all other credit accident and health insurance
contracts must comply with the claim reserve requirements in §
3.6102 of this chapter (relating
to Claims Reserves).
(b) Minimum standards for claim reserves.
(1)
Disability income.
(A) Interest. The maximum
interest rate for claim reserves is specified in §
3.7006 of this title (relating to
Specific Standards for Morbidity, Interest, and Mortality).
(B) Morbidity. Minimum standards with respect
to morbidity are those specified in §
3.7006 of this title, except that,
at the option of the insurer:
(i) for claims
with a duration from date of disablement of less than two years, reserves may
be based on the insurer's experience, if such experience is considered
credible, or upon other assumptions designed to place a sound value on the
liabilities.
(ii) For group
disability income claims with a duration from date of disablement of more than
two years but less than five years, reserves may, with the approval of the
commissioner, be based on the insurer's experience for which the insurer
maintains underwriting and claim administration control. The request for such
approval of a plan of modification to the reserve basis must include:
(I) an analysis of the credibility of the
experience;
(II) a description of
how all of the insurer's experience is proposed to be used in setting
reserves;
(III) a description and
quantification of the margins to be included;
(IV) a summary of the financial impact that
the proposed plan of modification would have had on the insurer's last filed
annual statement;
(V) any other
information deemed necessary by the commissioner.
(C) Duration of disablement. For
contracts with an elimination period, the duration of disablement should be
measured as dating from the time that benefits would have begun to accrue had
there been no elimination period.
(D) Credibility. For experience to be
considered credible for purposes of subparagraph (B)(ii) of this paragraph, the
company should be able to provide claim termination patterns over no more than
six years reflecting at least 5,000 claims terminations during the third
through fifth claims durations on reasonably similar applicable policy forms.
For claim reserves to reflect "sound values" and/or reasonable margins, reserve
tables based on credible experience should be adjusted regularly to maintain
reasonable margins. Demonstrations may be required by the commissioner based on
published literature.
(2) All other benefits.
(A) Interest. The maximum interest rate for
claim reserves is specified in §
3.7006 of this title (relating to
Specific Standards for Morbidity, Interest, and Mortality).
(B) Morbidity or other contingency. The
reserve must be based on the insurer's experience, if such experience is
considered credible, or upon other assumptions designed to place a sound value
on the liabilities.
(c) Claim reserve methods generally. Any generally accepted or reasonable actuarial method or combination of methods may be used to estimate all claim liabilities. The methods used for estimating liabilities generally may be aggregate methods, or various reserve items may be separately valued. Approximations based on groupings and averages may also be employed. Adequacy of the claim reserves, however, shall be determined in the aggregate.
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