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Friday 7 July 2017

Global study recognises impact of Vitality insurance model

Insurer credited as pioneer of Shared-Value Insurance
Organisation now has 6m members around the world
Everyday 9,000 gym workouts are logged by members in the UK alone

A new report published by the Shared Value Initiative has recognised the Vitality business model as a leading example of Shared-Value in insurance.

The report, “Insuring Shared Value: How Insurers Gain Competitive Advantage by Better Addressing Society’s Needs”, makes the case for insurers to pursue shared value, a business strategy that aligns core profit making activities with pursuing large scale social impact, by activating an entire ecosystem of complementary stakeholders to create, for example, more resilient and insurable cities or prevent ill-health in target population groups.

It is clear that insurers have the unique opportunity to “monetise” better health, and align their commercial interests with making society healthier. 

Commenting on Vitality’s development in the UK, Jack Wild, Director and protection adviser at Jack Wild Consulting, said: “It is refreshing to see a completely new way for insurers to assess risk over time, which also enables customers to influence the future cost of their cover. When speaking with our clients, I am confident the benefits and discounts they receive really do help motivate them to improve their health. Shared value models in protection insurance allow the customer to benefit financially whilst they are healthy, not just when they become ill, which is a great model for the future of insurance.”

Discovery Chief Executive, Adrian Gore, commented on the report: “It is critical that institutions like ours add value to society and are not just about a transactional relationship. The profound thing about Vitality is that there are no trade-offs. Members experience better health, insurers have fewer claims and hence greater profitability and society benefits from healthier more productive citizens.” 

The research also identifies a number of powerful global trends that are affecting society and the environment and, therefore, the context in which businesses operate.

The Vitality model is increasingly relevant because it is responsive to current trends and addresses changing realities, including the demand for corporate citizenship, increasing burden of lifestyle diseases, ageing populations and emergence of technology. Increasingly, four types of behaviour (poor diet, physical inactivity, tobacco use, and excess alcohol intake) are causing preventable diseases which lead to 60% of deaths worldwide. 

The Vitality business model, grounded in behavioural economics, incentivises people to make healthier choices and dynamically rewards them for reducing their risk, in the form of premium reductions and other benefits. There is clinical evidence that Vitality members are healthier, live longer and claim less. For example, in South Africa where Vitality was created 20 years ago, highly engaged Vitality members have a 76% lower mortality rate and on average live 13 to 21 years longer than the rest of the insured population.

Neville Koopowitz, CEO of Vitality in the UK, said: “Shared value is at the heart of what we do; not just in the way we do business but as an embodiment of our core purpose of making people healthier and enhancing and protecting their lives. This purpose speaks directly to one of the biggest global trends at play today – the fact that people’s health is determined predominantly by their own lifestyle choices. We apply an innovative approach to health and life insurance that creates a virtuous circle that's good for the member, good for our business and good for society.”

By incentivising behaviour to achieve better health outcomes, Vitality enables a lowering of risk, thereby generating value for insurers and society.

ENDS