The Imperative of Pandemic Reserving in India Limitations of Generic Morbidity Models Key Components of India-Specific Morbidity Models Data Acquisition and Granularity Challenges Calibration Techniques for Indian Demographics Stochastic Modeling and Scenario Generation Impact of Socioeconomic Factors on Morbidity Validation and Back-Testing of Models Regulatory Considerations and Solvency Margins The Imperative of Pandemic Reserving in India The exigencies of recent global health crises have underscored the critical need for robust reserving strategies within the Indian insurance sector, particularly for pandemic-related claims. Traditional actuarial models, often calibrated against historical data from developed markets, exhibit inherent fragilities when applied to the unique epidemiological, demographic, and socioeconomic landscape of India. Underestimation of potential liabilities arising from widespread morbidity events can lead to solvency issues...
Table of Contents Core Mandate and Objectives Interoperability Standards and Protocols Technical Architecture Components Data Modeling and Standardization API Design and Management Security and Privacy Considerations Implementation Challenges and Strategies Impact on Stakeholders Core Mandate and Objectives The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) has issued directives aimed at fostering data interoperability within the health insurance ecosystem. The primary objective is to enable seamless exchange of health information between various entities, including insurers, healthcare providers, and policyholders. This initiative seeks to streamline claim processing, reduce fraud, enhance policyholder experience, and facilitate evidence-based product development. Achieving this requires a robust technical foundation capable of aggregating disparate data sources into a cohesive, accessible, and actionable format. The und...