Diabetes: Defining Moment of a Crisis By Daniel Miller Unless a widespread education and intervention campaign on diabetes takes place, we are looking at a disaster.
A Horror Story on Health Insurance By Daniel Miller The author gets caught in a maze after finding he is at severe risk of glaucoma and must act immediately or lose his eyesight.
The Start-Ups That Are Innovating in Life By Amy Radin Start-ups such as LifeDrip and Smart Asset are going after distribution, product, client experience, speed, productivity and more.
The Next Opioid Epidemic: Fentanyl By Mark Pew "The synthetic, opium-like drugs were so potent that six of the agents became ill after handling them. One fell into a coma."
Healthcare: Time for Independence By Tom Emerick “Employer frustration over the devastating collateral damage from a severely under-performing healthcare system is boiling over.”
Are Malpractice Claims Fading? (Video) By Erik Leander Richard Anderson Do we no longer need to focus so much on tort reform related to medical malpractice?
How to Shrink Employees’ Waistlines By Stephanie Pronk With lack of physical activity during modern office workdays, encouraging exercise is in everyone’s interests. The question is how.
How to Set Benefits in Different Nations By François Choquette For companies operating in more than one country, setting benefits can be complex. Here are benchmarks that will help.
The Promise of Continuous Underwriting By Bill Deemer Bobby Touran Typically, a risk is underwritten, bound... and forgotten. But new streams of data and automation allow for continuous underwriting.
Convergence and the Insurance Ecosystem By Stephen Applebaum Alan Demers Companies must anticipate the future, innovate beyond their core and transform their capabilities as rapidly as technology allows.
Lemonade's 'Synthetic Agent' Nonsense By Matteo Carbone Desperate for growth, Lemonade produces another howler: A lender receiving a 16% interest rate is presented as a (synthetic) agent.
Auto Insurance in an Existential Crisis By Stephen Applebaum Alan Demers The 125-year-old, $300 billion U.S. auto insurance industry is caught between runaway inflation and strained consumer wallets.