GE.08-64335
UN
GE.08-64335
UNITED
NATIONS
Distr.
GENERAL
FCCC/TP/2008/9 21 November 2008
ENGLISH ONLY
Mechanisms to manage financial risks from direct impacts of climate
Language:English
Score: 883159.3
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daccess-ods.un.org/acce...?open&DS=FCCC/TP/2008/9&Lang=E
Data Source: ods
• Q&A – answers to pre-submitted and frequently asked questions related to the enrolment campaign
Agenda
Third-Party Administrators Aetna, Empire Blue Cross and Cigna Dental
Participants
UN Health & Life Insurance Section together with the Health & Life Insurance Committee members
Staff, former staff and dependants covered under the US-based plans or planning to seek care in the US
Plan Participants
Global Third-Party Administrators
Global policyholder
Roles & responsibilities
UN HLISUnited Nations
• UNHQ-administered health insurance plans
are self-funded, hence UN acts as insurer of
the plans
• Decides on the benefits of the UN health
insurance plans
• Determines who is covered under the UN
health insurance plans
• Defines the administrative services the
Third-Party Administrators should offer
• Provides comprehensive health and life insurance plans to all plans participants
• Provides eligibility files to Third-Party Administrators (TPAs)
• Reviews the adequacy of the UNHQ- administered health insurance plans
• Provides policy and technical support to HR Partners, staff and retirees
Roles & responsibilities
Third-Party AdministratorsPlan Participants
• Fund portion of the UN health insurance plans
- General Assembly cost sharing mandate:
33% (plan participants), 67% (Member States)
• Understand the benefits of the UN health
insurance plan they are enrolled in
• Help keeping the UN health insurance plans
sustainable, eg by visiting in-network
providers, refusing fraud, waste and abuse
and becoming knowledgeable health
consumers
• Process claims by following and applying the plan rules
• Respond to inquiries from plan participants
• Provide a medical network of health care providers that offer both physical and virtual consultations
• Conduct fraud, waste and abuse investigation to protect the UN health insurance plans
• No premium changes
• Introduction of telephone and video consultations with in- network and out-of-network service providers
What will change effective 1 July 2021?
Language:English
Score: 868002.4
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https://www.un.org/insurance/s...n_for_us-based_plans_final.pdf
Data Source: un
The underwriter of the plan is the Aetna Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, United States of America (“insurance company”). The policyholder is the United Nations.
1.2 The plan is financed solely from the contributions of participating staff members.
Language:English
Score: 868002.4
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https://www.un.org/insurance/s...s/life_insurance_stai20026.pdf
Data Source: un
The underwriter of the plan is the Aetna Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, United States of America (“insurance company”). The policyholder is the United Nations.
1.2 The plan is financed solely from the contributions of participating staff members.
Language:English
Score: 868002.4
-
https://www.un.org/insurance/s...insurance/files/stai200018.pdf
Data Source: un
The underwriter of the plan is the Aetna Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, United States of America (“insurance company”). The policyholder is the United Nations.
1.2 The plan is financed solely from the contributions of participating staff members.
Language:English
Score: 868002.4
-
https://www.un.org/insurance/s....insurance/files/stai20026.pdf
Data Source: un
INSOLVENCY LAW : RECENT DEVELOPMENTS CONCERNING THE GLOBAL AND REGIONAL INITIATIVES REGARDING THE INSOLVENCY OF LARGE AND COMPLEX FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Resolution regimes
for FMIs, for example, need to give particular priority to maintaining continuity of
the critical functions that such infrastructures perform in financial markets and take
account of loss allocation arrangements under the rules of certain kinds of FMIs;
resolution regimes for insurers need to protect policyholder interests; and resolution
regimes need to interact effectively with client asset protection rules, so that client
assets could be rapidly transferred or returned in the resolution of a firm with
holdings of client assets.
22.
Language:English
Score: 855233.1
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daccess-ods.un.org/acce...n&DS=A/CN.9/WG.V/WP.118&Lang=E
Data Source: ods
PUBLIC MEETING: MONDAY, 6 MAY 2013 - PM
She also requested
additional information about the insurance scheme run by the National Health Insurance
Institute (INAM), which policyholders had complained was cumbersome and complicated.
22.
Language:English
Score: 855233.1
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https://daccess-ods.un.org/acc...en&DS=E/C.12/2013/SR.12&Lang=E
Data Source: ods
Corel Office Document [PFP#320054340]
International Civil Aviation Organization
REPORT
SGWI/2
SPECIAL GROUP ON AVIATION WAR RISK INSURANCE
SECOND MEETING
Montreal, 28–30 January 2002
REPORT
The
Language:English
Score: 849901.7
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https://www.icao.int/secretari...egal/Meetings/sgwi2_report.pdf
Data Source: un
SUMMARY RECORD OF THE 25TH MEETING, HELD AT HEADQUARTERS, NEW YORK, ON THURSDAY, 3 MAY 2018 : ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COUNCIL, 2018 SESSION, INTEGRATION SEGMENT
Climate risk insurance, which was becoming
increasingly prominent in discussions on managing such
risk in developing countries, could be implemented at
the micro level, where individual policyholders paid
premiums and received payouts directly; the meso level,
where risk aggregators such as associations,
cooperatives, credit unions or non-governmental
organizations received payouts and then provided
services to individuals; and the macro level, where
policies were held by Governments or national agencies,
and payouts were used to finance post-disaster
programmes and relief efforts for predefined groups.
15.
Language:English
Score: 829251.8
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https://daccess-ods.un.org/acc...et?open&DS=E/2018/SR.25&Lang=E
Data Source: ods
REPORT OF THE MULTI-YEAR EXPERT MEETING ON COMMODITIES AND DEVELOPMENT ON ITS 7TH SESSION, HELD AT THE PALAIS DES NATIONS, GENEVA, ON 15 AND 16 APRIL 2015
These products could be classified
into three groups, according to the intended policyholders, which included farmers (micro
level), businesses that provided financial intermediation (meso) and Governments (macro).
Language:English
Score: 781753.6
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daccess-ods.un.org/acce...en&DS=TD/B/C.I/MEM.2/31&Lang=E
Data Source: ods