Coverage triggered by failure of expertise - not accidents
Professional liability
Liability involving bodily harm from treatment - not advice
Medical Malpractice
Liability involving economic loss without physical injury
Erros and Omissions
Physical harm vs financial loss
This trend refers to increasing claim costs due to larger settlements and jury awards
Rising claim severity
Professional liability is primarily divided into these two categories based on type of risk exposure.
Medical malpractice and E&O
Malpractice claims are distinguished from E&O by involving this type of damage
Physical Injury
E&O claims primarily involve this type of harm
This category has higher claim severity due to the nature of damages involved
Medical Malpractice
This trend reflects the growing number and complexity of lawsuits
This factor determines how professional liability risks are categorized across industries
Type of service provided (healthcare vs professional services)
This type of claim involves a failure to diagnose or properly treat a patient
Malpractice/negligence
Negligence in providing professional services
Frequency vs severity
This emerging exposure is increasing risk in professional liability due to digital reliance
Cyber risk
This concept explains why different professions require different liability coverage structures
Variation in risk exposure
This claim characteristic makes malpractice one of the most costly insurance segments
High claim severity
Compared to malpractice, E&O claims typically follow this pattern
High frequency and low severity
This factor makes on segment more heavily regulated due to direct impact on human health
Physical harm
This healthcare-related issue is increasing malpractice risk globally
Staffing shortages and burnout
This policy structure determines whether coverage is triggered based on when the claim is made versus when the incident occurred
claims-made vs occurrence coverage
Dr. Smith is an OBGYN with a claims-made policy (retroactive date: 1/1/21). She delivers a baby in March 2023; the baby suffers a birth injury. In August of 2025, Dr. Smith Retires and cancels her policy WITHOUT purchasing tail coverage. In January 2026, the family filed a lawsuit. Dr. Smith’s new insurer has a retroactive date of September 2025. Which policy (if any) covers this claim?
No policy will respond, because the claim was made after the original policy ended and before the new policy’s retroactive date.
This coverage requirement means a claim must be reported during the active policy period, often creating the need for tail coverage upon cancellation
Claims-made coverage
This legal and structural difference explains why malpractice claims often take longer to resolve and involve more complex litigation than E&O claims
The involvement of bodily injury and medical standards of care
This broad industry trend reflects increasing claim severity driven by larger settlements, rising litigation costs, and more complex legal environements.
Rising claim severity