Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/claims-triageTriage an incoming insurance claim: check the coverage trigger against policy wording, band severity and complexity, screen for fraud indicators, set a first-pass reserve range, and route with an SLA. Use when asked to triage a claim, review a first notice of loss (FNOL), assess a new claim, decide fast-track vs adjuster routing, or screen a claim for SIU referral. Produces a structured triage note with coverage view, severity band, indicator screen, reserve range, and a routing recommendation.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/claims-triageThe first 24 hours of a claim set its cost and its customer experience. This skill runs a disciplined first-pass triage: does the policy respond, how big and how complicated is this, are there indicators that warrant investigation, what should we hold in reserve, and who should own it by when.
Ask for these if not provided; if working from a thin FNOL, proceed and label every inference [assumed — confirm]:
1. Coverage trigger. Quote or paraphrase the operative insuring clause. State: trigger met / trigger uncertain / trigger likely not met — with the specific wording reason. Sweep exclusions and conditions precedent (notification timing, security warranties). If coverage is uncertain, flag a reservation-of-rights consideration and route to coverage counsel review — never let uncertainty default to "covered".
2. Severity/complexity banding:
| Band | Profile | Typical routing |
|---|---|---|
| 1 — Fast-track | Clear coverage, quantum near/below deductible-adjacent threshold, no injury, single party | Automated/desk settlement |
| 2 — Standard | Clear coverage, moderate quantum, routine investigation | Adjuster |
| 3 — Complex | Large loss, bodily injury, multiple parties, coverage questions, or business interruption | Senior adjuster, early expert instruction |
| 4 — Major/CAT | Catastrophe-linked, potential limit loss, litigation likely, reputational exposure | Major-loss team + counsel, executive notification |
Band on the worse of severity and complexity.
3. Fraud-indicator screen. Check common indicators: loss shortly after inception or cover increase, late reporting without explanation, documentation inconsistencies, over-documentation, prior similar claims, financial-distress signals, uncooperative or steering behaviour, loss narrative inconsistent with physical evidence. State only which indicators are present and absent. Two or more material indicators → recommend SIU referral in parallel with normal handling; the claim is still handled in good faith.
4. First-pass reserve. Give a range for ultimate incurred: indemnity + expense (adjusting, legal, experts), gross and net of deductible. State the basis (repair estimate, comparable claims, injury tariff) and label it first-pass, to be revised on investigation.
5. Routing + SLA. Name the route, the required first contact/action, and the SLA (e.g. fast-track: decision in 5 business days; Band 3: insured contacted within 24h, site inspection within 5 days).
1. Loss summary — 2–3 sentences, facts only. 2. Coverage trigger — clause cited, trigger view, exclusions/conditions checked, open coverage questions. 3. Severity band — band + one-line rationale. 4. Indicator screen — table: indicator | present? | evidence. Then: SIU referral recommended yes/no. 5. First-pass reserve — range, basis, gross/net. 6. Routing & SLA — route, owner type, first actions with deadlines. 7. Information needed — the specific documents/statements to request next.
End every triage note with: "This is analytical support for triage, not a coverage determination. Coverage, reserving, and referral decisions follow your organisation's claims-handling policy and applicable regulation."
[assumed — confirm][to confirm against wording]