MIB Group

Not to be confused with Motor Insurers' Bureau.
Mutual-benefit, not-for-profit corporation.
Industry Life Insurance, Health Insurance
Founded 1902
Headquarters Braintree, Massachusetts, United States
Area served
United States, Canada
Products MIB Cross Check, MIB Life Index
Services MIB Checking Service, Insurance Activity Index, Follow-Up Service Plan-F
Subsidiaries MIB, Inc., MIB Solutions, Inc.
Website

MIB Group, Inc. or MIB (formerly the Medical Information Bureau) is a membership corporation owned by approximately 430 member insurance companies in the United States and Canada. Formed in 1902 and based in Braintree, Massachusetts, MIB provides services designed to protect insurers, policyholders, and applicants from attempts to conceal or omit information material to underwriting life & health insurance.

Mission and business model

MIB's mission is to uncover errors, omissions, misrepresentations on insurance applications to reduce fraud and anti-selection or adverse selection so companies can offer and consumers can purchase affordable life insurance protection. MIB Group, Inc. is a member-owned corporation that has operated on a not-for-profit basis in the United States and Canada since 1902. MIB's Underwriting Services are used exclusively by MIB's member life and health insurance companies to assess an individual's risk and eligibility during the underwriting of life, health, disability income, critical illness, and long-term care insurance policies. These services "alert" underwriters to errors, omissions or misrepresentations made on insurance applications.[1] The information must be verified by a reliable source prior to any underwriting action being taken. MIB's subsidiaries offer other business services to members and customers in addition to MIB's Underwriting Services.[2]

The applicant authorizes MIB member insurance companies to search MIB, and as a result, the insurer may report certain medical conditions that impact a person's health or longevity, impacting risk assessment by the company.[3] MIB's data base does not contain actual medical records and information is gathered from an underwriting investigation that may include: information from the applicant's medical questionnaire (application), relevant information from the applicant's attending physician, notice of adverse lab test results (non-specific flag as to values), and DMV information. When MIB member insurance companies report to MIB and receive information from MIB, it is done in codes to protect the consumer's privacy. MIB reports are regulated by the Fair Credit Reporting Act and consumers (US and Canadian) can request disclosure of their MIB report, should they have one, for free once each year (visit www.mib.com for complete disclosure information). Consumers can request an additional free copy only after they have had an adverse action taken against them by an insurance company after applying for an insurance policy.

According to the Federal Trade Commission, MIB's member companies account for 99 percent of the individual life insurance policies and 80 percent of all health and disability policies issued in the United States and Canada.[4] Under the FCRA, MIB is categorized as a "nationwide specialty consumer reporting agency" and must provide annual disclosure of credit reports to all consumers who request their files.[5]

History

Once known as the "Medical Information Bureau" MIB was organized in 1902 to provide fraud protection services to insurers.[6]

From 1902 through 1945, MIB was governed by a sub-committee of the Association of Life Insurance Medical Directors of America (ALIMDA). In 1946, MIB was established as an unincorporated association under New York law and, in 1978, it became a Delaware membership corporation.[7]

References

  1. Carrns, Ann (15 January 2014). "Consumers Can Check on Data Beyond Their Credit Reports". New York Times.
  2. "mib.com - Home". www.mib.com. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  3. Hinerman, Ed. "Is MIB the Life Insurance Bad Guy or Good Guy?". Hinerman Group.
  4. "Nation's Largest Insurance Reporting Agency Agrees To Expand Consumer Rights". Ftc.gov. 2011-06-24. Retrieved 2013-10-02.
  5. "MIB Group, Inc. Consumer Guide". mib.com. Retrieved 10 February 2011.
  6. "MIB Group - History of MIB" Archived April 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  7. Littell, Bob (2000-02-07). "The Mysterious MIB - Not Any More.". The National Underwriter. Retrieved 2006-08-04.

 This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Government document "http://www.ftc.gov/opa/1995/06/mib.htm".

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