SAS Institute: 2022 InsurTech Trends – Anti-Fraud Analytics Booms As Cyber War Rages
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New research shows insurers' rapid adoption of predictive algorithms and digital identity technology to stem the pandemic-driven fraud deluge
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Insurers' use of predictive analytics to fight fraud has reached an all-time high, according to the latest insurance fraud technology study by the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud and analytics and AI leader SAS. The State of Insurance Fraud Technology study reveals that 80% of insurers use predictive modeling to detect fraud, up from 55% in 2018.
In a category new to the 2021 survey, the study also underscores the importance of identity verification software, cited by 40% of survey respondents. Identity analytics is quickly becoming must-have technology for insurers amid an alarming spike in malicious phishing scams, up 600% since the pandemic's onset.
"The shifts we've seen since the 2018 study emphasize the increasingly sophisticated technologies needed to foil insurance fraudsters' criminal exploits," said
The study results will be explored in an upcoming insurance fraud webinar (https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_kKDNzRLYTpCBCr7x-N7EIQ) hosted by the Coalition and SAS, The State of Insurance Fraud Technology 2022: Trends as the World Reopens,
Gauging insurance fraud technology trends since 2012
Insurance fraud causes more than
Since 2012, the Coalition has used its biennial State of Insurance Fraud Technology study to track how technology is augmenting fraud fighters' abilities to thwart fraudsters and criminal rings. SAS has been a partner in the research effort since the inaugural study.
Now in its fifth iteration since 2012, the latest study is based on responses to a 20-question survey sent to 100 Coalition members in
"Capturing these trends over time enables us to understand how, and to what extent, insurance companies use anti-fraud technology," said
Additional takeaways from the latest study include:
* Anti-fraud technology is flourishing. The study identified automated red flags (88%), predictive modeling (80%), text mining (65%), reporting capability (64%), case management (61%), exception reporting (51%), and data visualization/link analysis (51%) among insurers' most used anti-fraud technologies.
* Insurers are diversifying their data sources. Beyond relying on their own internal data, insurers are turning to industry fraud-watch lists (88%), public records (79%), third-party data aggregators (55%), social-media data (48%) and data from personal devices (15%). Notably, the use of unstructured data soared from just under half in 2018 to 81% in 2021.
* A picture is worth a thousand data points. Insurers are flocking to photo analysis technology (up from 49% in 2018 to 81% in 2021) to authenticate claim damage, identify digitally altered images, and index pictures submitted in other claims.
* Investigators are clamoring for more resources. New anti-fraud technology is creating efficiencies in investigative processes, but the resources insurers are dedicating to internal and external investigative teams are insufficient to keep pace with the billions in fraud committed each year. Limited IT resources was the top anti-fraud challenge, cited by 68% of respondents.
"We know that criminals are using advanced technology at scale to steal personal information and plunder billions of dollars from insurance companies each year," said
The State of Insurance Fraud Technology study and similar Coalition research efforts are aimed at preparing fraud investigators and their leadership teams for the threats that lay ahead. Learn more at InsuranceFraud.org.
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