Casualty Insurance

Amwins delivers primary and excess casualty insurance solutions for your clients' most complex risks.

Custom solutions and market clout at your fingertips

With more than 580 dedicated casualty professionals across the country,  collaboration is in our DNA. Amwins delivers trusted consultation, market access and creative program structures to place coverage for even the most complex and layered accounts —providing value-added resources, unmatched service and expertise every step of the way.

$10.7B

annual U.S. premium placements

985

dedicated professionals


700

casualty markets we place business with

Casualty areas of specialty

Construction

Whether your client is a residential or commercial general contractor, specialty trade contractor or has another role in construction projects, Amwins has the primary, excess and other coverage solutions to protect against unforeseen losses.

Energy

With energy sources continuously evolving, our specialists stay on top of market conditions to deliver premier casualty insurance solutions across upstream, midstream, downstream, utilities and many other classes.

Environmental

Our specialists understand that environmental and pollution exposures vary by region and class of business. We have the intel on regional issues and carrier appetites to find the right solution for your clients' unique needs.

Healthcare

Amwins specialists are committed to expertise, collaboration and unique product development, allowing us to provide optimal coverage solutions for nearly every segment of the dynamic healthcare industry.

Hospitality + Entertainment

Do you have a large, coverage-driven account in the hospitality sector? Bring it on. We specialize in difficult-to-place risks from nightclubs to hotels to casinos, including liquor liability.

Manufacturing + Distribution

Whether your client is involved in the design, development, manufacturing or distribution of products, we've got market access and expertise to deliver custom solutions that can't be found in the standard market.

Public Entity

Public entities come in all shapes and sizes – from municipalities and government agencies to educational entities. Our specialists have the expertise to provide comprehensive, cost-effective casualty insurance coverage that meets your clients' unique needs.

Real Estate

Whether your client owns a multi-family building or student housing on the residential side, or a strip mall or industrial warehouse on the commercial side, Amwins brokers have the casualty expertise and market relationships to protect against unforeseen losses.

Transportation

Amwins specialists strategically place coverage for a wide range of complex transportation risks, including long and short-haul trucking operations, commercial auto, medical transport, rideshare and much more.

Specialty Coverages

Our coverage expertise includes commercial auto, construction wraps, pollution liability, general liability, liquor liability, product recall, products liability, umbrella + excess liability, workers' compensation and more.
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Actuarial services

Licensing robust cutting-edge software, our in-house actuarial team runs account and portfolio-level reports ensure submission details and pricing are as accurate as possible.

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Claims advocacy

From designing a proactive claims management plan to engaging on difficult and complex claims, Amwins supports our clients when they need us the most.
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Custom product development

We collaborate with you to deliver solutions based on specific coverage needs — tapping into our specialization model to craft the right approach. 

 

Casualty resources + insights

Stay up to date on emerging casualty insurance trends and topics

3 Factors Threatening the Nursing Home Liability Market

Nov 17, 2020, 02:23 AM
With ample capacity in nursing home and long-term care liability insurance, competition remains strong among carriers. However, the convergence of three separate events are threatening to create a perfect storm in the marketplace.
Title : 3 Factors Threatening the Nursing Home Liability Market
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Date : Dec 13, 2016, 05:00 AM
With ample capacity in nursing home and long-term care liability insurance, competition remains strong among carriers. However, clouds have been gathering on the horizon, with the convergence of three separate events threatening to create a perfect storm in the marketplace. 
 

Increasing Claims

Claim frequency and severity has been climbing for the past several years, with nursing home litigation being one of the fastest-growing areas of health care litigation. In a recently published report on an actuarial analysis of the long-term care sector, it was stated that long-term care frequency is increasing by 5% annually.

Severity is a concern as well. Consider a few mega-claims in the past few years:
  • In Florida, a jury awarded $1.1 billion to the family of a woman who died following multiple falls.
  • In West Virginia, a nursing home was dealt a $90 million wrongful death ruling (later reduced to $32 million). 
  • In California, a judge upheld a $23 million jury award in a wrongful death lawsuit.
  • In Tennessee, a jury awarded a $30 million judgment, which included $28 million in punitive damages, against a nursing home where poor care led to a resident’s death.

 

Significant Regulatory Changes

In another development, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, in a recently published rule, have prohibited binding pre-dispute arbitration agreements. The rule, effective November 28, is the first major change to nursing home regulations in 25 years and will impact both liability claims and pricing. Although the American Health Care Association has filed a lawsuit in an attempt to overturn the rule, the government’s action is a clear indication that these types of arbitration agreements are a target for regulatory scrutiny.

If the rule stands, it will drive up costs. The aforementioned report, noted that claims subject to arbitration have a 7% lower total cost and settle three months sooner than those resolved without arbitration. From a claims frequency standpoint, the rule also provides plaintiffs’ attorneys more reasons to sue by mandating several new rules around nutrition, medical treatment, infection prevention and control, monitoring of use of antibiotics, personnel requirements, and more. 

Increased claims will drive up base premiums over time, but the pricing impact for nursing homes will be felt immediately. For many years, brokers in long-term care could secure premium credits for their clients that used binding arbitration agreements, and those deals are now obsolete. 

 

Changing Patient Demographics

There is a third cloud on the storm front: the population of nursing home residents is changing. Advances in physical care have led to patients living longer, but as medical care finds ways to prolong life, more and more elderly are dealing with mental deterioration. According to the World Health Organization, over 20% of adults aged 60 and over suffer from mental or neurological disorders. 

These conditions increase the cost of care, and in some instances nursing home facilities were not designed or staffed to treat high levels of mental disorders among residents. Additionally, it takes more, and more highly trained, people to care for mentally impaired but physically capable residents, compared to physically impaired people who have traditionally comprised the nursing home population.

 

The Impact

With an abundance of capacity in the market, carriers are currently turning a blind eye to these threats. There is a disconnect between the increase in claim frequency and severity already being seen in the market and the cheap and plentiful availability of coverage. 

However, it is only a matter of time before claims catch up to carriers. Some of the new capital in the market has not experienced problems with the line. A marked increase in severity and frequency has the potential to take some of the “less informed” capital out of the market. This will have several impacts. First, reduction in capacity will cause pricing to go up and appetites to restrict as happened in the 1990s, where it was difficult to place coverage for nursing facilities. Second, carriers that have exited the market have less incentive to actively manage long-tail claims as they seek to close out reserves, leading to settlements that are in opposition to the best interests of the policyholder.

Agents and brokers need to act now to position themselves and their clients for market disruption. They should work with their long-term care clients to be sure they understand the changes taking place. In particular, taking the arbitration clause out of a defense attorney’s hands is a significant development that affects more than just insurance. 

Additionally, agents and brokers should partner with a wholesaler that is an expert in the long-term care liability marketplace. Working with an experienced broker can provide resources for agents to educate clients. Also, when the market does harden, having established relationships with a wholesale broker that specializes in long-term care liability will help ensure that clients have access to insurers that are willing and able to provide needed coverage

 

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This article was authored by Don Tejeski, senior vice president and casualty broker with AmWINS Brokerage of Pennsylvania, and Matthew Wasta, managing director with AmWINS Program Underwriters.

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  • Casualty
  • Healthcare (P&C)
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Case Study

Filling excess placements despite changes in exposure.

When an insured with five New York City hotels converted operations to COVID-19 shelters for the local homeless population, the change in exposure threw a wrench in the renewal. While the general liability carrier stayed on the account, the excess carrier discontinued coverage. The retail agent contacted Amwins to fill the excess coverage for these locations.

With a local government agency managing and operating these shelters, the insured’s exposure was lessened. However given the venue, occupancy and market conditions, filling out the program was still an uphill climb. Through our market access and industry expertise, we were able to fill the policy with just two layers - securing a big win for our retail client and their insured.

Amwins has the expertise to place complex risks consistently and effectively.