Best practice – an insurer’s perspective
Headlines
- best practice in health and safety management has an impact on
insurance premiums
- insurers can take a proactive role in improving risk
management
- bodily injury claims inflation is increasing faster than the
Retail Price Index.
As we all know, an employer has a duty of care towards its
employees. If an employee suffers injury or ill-health as a result
of work and believes the employer is responsible, they’re entitled
to sue their employer for damages to compensate them for the
injury. To do that, the employee needs to:
- demonstrate that the employer owed them a duty of care
- that the employer was in breach of that duty, and
- that the breach led to the employee’s injury.
Every employer is legally obliged to make sure that funds are
always available to pay for this type of compensation. In fact, the
Employers’ Liability (Compulsory Insurance) Act 1969 requires all
employers (with a limited number of exceptions) to take out a
policy to cover their legal liability to their employees. The
annual premium of Employers’ Liability (EL) insurance is based on a
percentage of the wages paid to employees, and takes into account a
number of factors, including:
- the type of industry
- the inherent risks
- the claims experience, and
- the robustness of the business’s approach to health and safety
management.
In today’s tough economic climate, many businesses are focusing on
trying to reduce the amount they pay for EL insurance.
Unfortunately, even though the business case for managing health
and safety effectively has been argued for some time, some
companies don’t realise that reducing EL premiums demands further
investment in their accident prevention programme. It’s important
to understand that there are bigger prizes at stake than merely
trying to contain EL premiums. In many cases, uninsured costs are
likely to far exceed those incurred in compensation payments.
How can health and safety management give business value?
Any forward-looking business should be seeking to manage out all
unwanted hazards, maximising the business return and creating a
sustainable business over time. This means looking beyond legal
compliance and building an organisation that incorporates risk
thinking into all its activities, starting at boardroom level and
cascading down through the business.
Organisations also need to be aware of the legal climate they
exist in, and understand that many of the developments in both
statutory and common law over the last two decades have increased
risk considerably.
Bodily injury claims inflation is increasing faster than the
Retail Price Index. In addition, many business owners or managers
know from their own experience, and from articles in the press,
that the UK is becoming similar to the US in its desire to seek
legal redress for any apparent wrong.
Evidence also suggests that many businesses lack awareness of
emerging risk issues, such as nanotechnology or suggestions that
shift work can harm health, which may impact on them in the future.
These factors, coupled with an increasing realisation that
reputation is an asset for a business, make a pretty convincing
case that it pays for any business to ensure it is giving adequate
attention to the management of health and safety issues.
What’s the insurer’s role?
Insurers are acutely aware of the increased risk businesses are
facing. They regularly deal with the results of failure in the form
of insurance claims, and this gives them the knowledge to offer
advice and guidance to all businesses.
While regulators like the Health and Safety Executive are
concerned with criminal law, insurers are mainly concerned with
civil law. The requirements of civil law differ from criminal law,
which is why insurers’ suggestions for improving a risk’s
resilience to workplace claims may differ from any requirements by
a regulator. Therefore, any business that wants to be successful in
dealing with risk will need to go beyond just compliance with
statutory law and create a working environment that can be compared
favourably with its peers. This requires a best practice approach
to health and safety management.
This need not be difficult or expensive in practice, and
frequently insurers can give their customers the benefit of their
risk insight. As such, in choosing an insurer as a risk partner,
you need to look beyond premium comparisons and recognise the value
that a proactive insurer can deliver to your business in the long
term. As a key stakeholder, the insurer can extend customer
relationships built on understanding, partnership and
collaboration.
For example, a good insurer will share its knowledge in
developing a structured approach to health and safety that will
prevent accidents, occupational ill-health and, ultimately, claims.
Such an approach would adopt an accepted model that’s based on
competent risk assessment, achieves best practice against defined
standards or guidance, and is well documented.
In addition to this, insurers may also look for adequate
resources, including;
- the use of competent assistance to advise and direct health and
safety management programme
- proactive commitment at a senior level (based on corporate
governance requirements)
- a supportive culture that permeates throughout the
organisation.
Any business that manages its health and safety obligations with
these issues in mind should be able to negotiate favourable terms
from an insurer. More importantly, it will be exploiting risk
issues to enhance its business performance, which is the true
purpose of risk management.
Our thanks to Jim Wilkes and Huw Andrews from Zurich
Insurance who helped with this article.