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Susan Gurevitz "Reflections on a seminal week: more than 180 exhibitors and 1,200 attendees show up at the 13th Annual National Workers' Comp and Disability Conference in November. Top subjects of discussion include the changes in California's workers' compensation laws, return-to-work strategies and techniques on disability management". Risk & Insurance. FindArticles.com. 28 Nov, 2009. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0BJK/is_1_16/ai_n9507497/
Risk & Insurance
View more issues:
Articles in Jan, 2005 issue of Risk & Insurance
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Alternative risk
by Mark Cohen -
Small brokers scared of getting whacked: mom-and-pop shops fear large carriers will use the Spitzer investigation to scrimp on commissions and raise service charges
by Steve Yahn -
E&S rates: a 'tolerable' nuisance: modest increases reported for 2005 could shoot skyward, however, as medical inflation devours any hard-fought gains. Let buyers beware, and make sure they have a policy with insurers who will be around a decade from
by Cyril Tuohy -
Toasting the quiet players
by Roger Crombie -
Outlook 2005: look out! may Mother Nature spin her wheels in neutral this year, and stay out of the business of inflicting catastrophic damage on the property-and-casualty industry. Regulators and the risk management industry have enough on their plate al
by Steve Yahn - Insurance buyers cool to carrier web technology: when it comes to the online technology offered by carriers, middle- market insurance buyers find they can't always get what they want, or sometimes even what they need
- Web log launched
- Top concerns for life CFOs
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Spitzer blows stronger than Hurricanes: Charley, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne wash out third-quarter profits, but reinsurers at Baden Baden are more worried about "Hurricane Eliot."
by Graham Buck -
Conflicts of interest
by Graham Buck -
Quote of the month
by Tom Rosencrants -
Running man
by Steve Yahn -
A 'marshall plan' for employers: marshaling resources to bridge the needs of individual patients and that of a group of employees encourages companies to focus on the consumption of health care instead of the production of benefits
by Diane L. Huber - Insurance company software directory
- Slips, falls, fires, 'burn' eateries
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Worker's compensation
by Patrick Ogden -
Spitzer rains on Lloyd's parade: flexing its new-found financial muscle, Lloyd's looks to pump up further with a high profile debut in the international debt market
by Graham Buck -
Sidestepping a quagmire
by Graham Buck -
Playing in high-stakes arenas
by Patricia Vowinkel - Reinsurers post stats
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Catastrophically dependent
by Richard Mackowsky -
Getting their feet webbed: for the past 18 months, Lexington has been automating policy administration in the underwriting process, and as many as nine products are distributed over the Web. The most complex transactions, however, are still paper-based
by Tom Starner -
Marsh and regulators expected to settle by February: bargaining points include bid-rigging, restitution and punitive damages
by Steve Yahn -
Service agreements unpopular
by Graham Buck - Correction
- RIMS announces 2005 speakers
- AIG installs defibrillators
- Corrections
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Reflections on a seminal week: more than 180 exhibitors and 1,200 attendees show up at the 13th Annual National Workers' Comp and Disability Conference in November. Top subjects of discussion include the changes in California's workers' compensation laws,
by Susan Gurevitz -
The middleman's muddle
by Jack Roberts -
Playing for keeps: big-name brokers have publicly eschewed contingent commissions, but that's not going to stop them from looking for other sources of revenue such as services that buyers once received for free
by Patricia Vowinkel -
Trimming a surplus: only companies with sound balance sheets can absorb the kinds of claims that result from unexpected losses, and that's going to mean consolidation in the not-too-distant future, says Kevin H. Kelley, CEO of Lexington Insurance Co., the
by Jack Roberts -
A cure for the fraud virus
by Peter Rousmaniere -
Kendall Jackson's toast to safety: the famed winery puts a cork in safety risks, encouraging employees to imbibe in a culture of health maintenance
by Josh Clifton
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