Abstract

Medical care is a type of health service that mainly consists of investigation and diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitative care, and nursing care for the purpose of maintaining the structure or function of the body. A medical care payment is a sort of payment made for the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, sickness, or damage, which includes checkups and periodic exams. In low-income nations, out-of-pocket expenditures account for 60 % of overall health spending, compared to 20 % in high-income ones. Willingness to pay is perhaps the highest money that a person is willing to provide to ensure that a particular wellbeing care action is undertaken. Previous research works focused mainly on the patients’ willingness to pay but not the amount they can afford. The focus of this study is to determine the level of willingness to pay, the mean amount of willingness to pay for medical care, and its major determinants. A community-based cross-section study was carried out among Gondar city residents from February 2022 to March 2022. The study participants were recruited by systematic random sampling. Four data collectors conducted interviews using a questionnaire. For analysis, the dataset was entered into Epi Info version 7 and transferred to STATA version 14. The descriptive part was summarized using summary statistics like mean, median, and standard deviation. Determinants of willingness to pay were identified using a Tobit regression model with a significance of p-value ≤ 0.05 and confidence interval (CI ≠ 0). Finally, the analyzed data was presented using tables and figures accordingly. The study involved 414 participants, with a response rate of 95.8 %. About 53.62 % of the participants were willing to pay for medical care and the average willingness to pay was 24.17 USD per year. They were more willing to pay if they were still working (β = 19.66), currently married (β = 14.49), had a family history of medical care (β = 25.74), had good knowledge (β = 36.16), had a history of medical illness (β = 16.64), lived a long distance from the health facility (β = 1.98), and had a high wealth index (β = 29.51). The willingness to pay for medical care is below the actual cost. Designing a cost-recovery strategy with multi-tiered programs assigned to the most vulnerable individuals, such as the elderly, less educated, or seriously sick, is a strategic approach of the raising demand for service uptake and accessibility.

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