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- Package Policy:
- Any combination of two or more lines of coverage's into a single policy.
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- Paid-Up Insurance:
- Insurance on which all required premiums have been paid.
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- Paramedical Examination:
- Physical examination of an applicant by a trained person other than a physician,
usually done for a life insurance policy or a individual health insurance
policy.
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- Partial Disability:
- The result of an illness or injury which prevents an insured from performing
one or more of the functions of their occupation.
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- Participating Policy:
- A life insurance policy under which the company agrees to distribute to
policyholders the part of its surplus which its Board of Directors determines
is not needed at the end of the business year.
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- Pension Benefits:
- A series of payments to be provided in accordance with the plan of benefits.
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- Pension Plan:
- A plan established and maintained by an employer, group of employers, or
union to provide for the payment of determinable benefits to participants
after retirement.
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- Percentage Participation:
- A provision in a health insurance contract that the insurer and insured
will share covered losses in agreed proportions.
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- Peril:
- The cause of a loss insured against in a policy.
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- Permanent Life Insurance:
- A phrase used to cover any form of life insurance except term; generally
insurance that accrues cash value, such as whole life.
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- Permit Bond:
- A bond that guarantees a person who has been issued a permit will comply
with any laws and ordinances in which the permit was issued.
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- Persistency:
- A term used to refer to the length of time insurance remains continuously
in force with a company.
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- Personal Articles Floater:
- A type of insurance designed to meet the needs for insurance on property
of a moveable nature. This coverage usually protects against all physical
loss, subject to special exclusions and conditions. Examples of this type
of property include jewelry, furs, silverware, fine arts, and valuable collectors
pieces..
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- Personal Injury
Protection (PIP):
- First party no fault coverage in which an insurer pays, within specified
limits, the medical, hospital, loss of work income, and funeral expenses of
the insured.
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- Personal Lines:
- Those types of insurance, such as individual automobile or home insurance
rather than for businesses or organizations.
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- Physical Damage:
- Damage to or loss of an automobile resulting from a named peril.
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- Plan Administrator:
- The person(s) controlling money or property contributed to the plan, usually
designated in the plan agreement.
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- Point-of-Service Plans:
- These plans permit insureds to choose providers outside the plan yet are
designed to encourage the use of network providers. A hybrid of a HMO and
PPO.
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- Policy:
- The legal document issued by the company to the policyholder, which outlines
the conditions and terms of the insurance; also called the policy contract
or the contract.
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- Policy Dividend:
- A refund of part of the premium on a participating insurance policy reflecting
any difference between the premium charged and actual experience.
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- Policy Loan:
- A loan made by a life insurance company from its general funds to a policyholder
on the security of the cash value of a policy.
- Policy Reserves:
- The measure of the funds that a life insurance company holds specifically
for fulfillment of its policy obligations.
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- Policy Term:
- The period of time for which an insurance policy provides coverage.
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- Policyholder:
- The person who owns a life insurance policy. This is usually the insured
person, but it may also be a relative of the insured, a partnership or a corporation.
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- Policyholders' Surplus:
- Sum over and above liabilities available for an insurer to meet future obligations
to its policyholders.
Pool:
- An organization of insurers or reinsurers through which particular types
of risk are underwritten.
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- Pre-Admission Certification:
- The process in which a health care professional evaluates an attending physician's
request for a patient's admission to a hospital to evaluate whether or not
inpatient care is necessary.
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- Preexisting Condition:
- A physical and / or mental condition of an insured which first manifested
itself prior to the effective date of a policy.
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- Preferred Provider
Organization (PPO):
- An arrangement whereby a third-party payer contracts with a group of medical
care providers who furnish medical services at lower than usual fees in return
for prompt payment and a certain volume of patients.
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- Premium:
- The sum paid by a policyholder to keep their insurance policy in force.
- Premium Finance: Allows the insured to pay part of the premium when coverage
takes effect and pay the rest during the policy period through arranged payments.
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- Primary Insurance:
- Insurance that pays compensation for a loss ahead (first) of any other insurance
coverage's the policyholder may have.
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- Principal Sum:
- An amount payable in one sum in the event of accidental death and in, some
cases, accidental dismemberment.
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- Probate:
- A court-supervised process of validating or establishing distribution of
assets of a deceased including the payment of outstanding obligations.
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- Probate Estate
- That portion of the assets and liabilities whose distribution is supervised
by the courts in the probate process.
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- Probationary Period:
- A period from the policy date to a specified time during which no sickness
coverage is effective. This is designed to eliminate any sickness actually
contracted before the policy went into effect.
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- Product Liability:
- Legal liability incurred by a manufacturer, merchant, or distributor because
of injury or damage resulting from the use of their product.
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- Product Liability Insurance:
- Protection against financial loss arising out of the legal liability incurred
by a manufacturer, merchant, or distributor because of injury or damage resulting
from the use of a covered product.
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- Proof of Loss:
- Documentation presented to the insurance company by the insured in support
of a claim so that the insurer can determine its liability under the policy.
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- Property Insurance:
- Insurance providing financial protection against the loss of, or damage
to, real and personal property caused by a covered peril.
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- Provision:
- A clause, sentence, or paragraph which of an insurance contract describes
or explains a feature, benefit, condition, or requirement of any insurance
protection afforded by the contract.
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- Proximate Cause:
- The effective cause of loss or damage; an unbroken chain of events between
the occurrence and damage.
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- Punitive Damages:
- A court awarded amount that exceeds the economic losses and general damages
of a defendant and is intended solely to punish the plaintiff because of reckless
or malicious acts.
- Pure Risk: Uncertainty whether a loss will occur. Only pure risks are insurable.
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