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Lydia Patterson is Claims Director, overseeing multi-state claims operations, regulatory compliance, and high-exposure litigation. She contributes thought leadership on improving injured worker care and advancing strategic, compassionate claims resolution across transportation operations.
After more than 26 years working across workers’ compensation, maritime, and Longshore (LHWCA) claims, I’ve learned that effective claims results are not only about responding swiftly, but having the right structures and people in place before the pressure hits. In today’s conditions, claims leaders are expected to move quickly and get it right the first time, and that balance comes from experience, structure, and disciplined decision-making. Speed and accuracy are often viewed as competing priorities, but in complex claims, they are closely connected. The fastest resolutions usually result from making the right decisions early. That begins with effective triage: quickly identifying jurisdiction, governing statute, compensability, and exposure. When those first principles are faltered or ambiguous, claims stall, reserves alter, and costs rise. Accuracy does not require flawless data at the inception; it requires informed certainty. Experience allows claims professionals to focus on material evidence, evaluate risk early, and act with assertion. When claims are assigned to professionals with the appropriate knowledge and authority, both speed and quality improve. Managing Maritime Risk with Data and Accountability Maritime risk and claims management continue to advance alongside the industry itself. Global operations, multinational crews, and progressively multifaceted contractual connections have expanded exposure and added tiers of complexity. Jurisdictional challenges, particularly under statutes such as the Jones Act and the Longshore Act, require prompt legal transparency as developing analyses of liability directly shape claim approach and conclusions. Another substantial shift is the increased focus on safety culture and employer accountability. Investigations are more thoroughly examined, documentation expectations are greater, and claim results are increasingly bound to operational procedures. In addition, prolonged deployments and the challenging nature of maritime labor have heightened consideration toward mental health, cumulative trauma, and fitness-for-duty considerations, further obscuring maritime claims and supporting the need for proactive, disciplined risk management.Modern claims administration is no longer just about closing files, but about leadership, vision, and controlled decision-making in a progressively complex risk setting.
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