Developing a pricing model for general medical consultation services among private consulting rooms in Harare, Zimbabwe
Chengetedzai Gota,
Gibson Mandozana,
Richard Makurumidze and
Shepherd Shamu
PLOS ONE, 2025, vol. 20, issue 12, 1-15
Abstract:
Background: There are often variations around setting tariffs or prices for payment of general medical consultation services between the medical insurance industry, the medical association, and the private health care providers. Differences in these tariffs have an impact on both the public and private health care sectors. The research study aimed to develop a pricing model for consultation services and ascertain the ideal price that should be charged for those services. Materials and methods: An analytical cross-sectional study design was utilized to collect data through a questionnaire for the input costs of operating a surgery as well as the consultation fee charged by General Medical practitioners who participated in the study. The recruitment period for this study was from 13 September 2023, to 29 September 2023, during which 170 medical practitioners completed the online questionnaire. Eight independent variables were analyzed in the study using Stata (version 14) to build a multiple linear regression model with the capability of predicting the mean consultation fee. The variables were registration fees, rental, cost of equipment, cost of consumables, salaries, utility costs, number of patients seen and actual profit. Results: A total of 170 General Medical Practitioners participated in the study. The variables which met the multiple linear regression assumptions that were included in the model were consumables, salaries, utilities, number of patients seen by doctor and actual profit made by the consulting room. The estimated ideal consultation fee, which was obtained using empirical data from the 170 surgeries sampled was US$23.28. Profit levels varied significantly by both suburb density (p
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0324572
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0324572
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