Journal Press India®

Customer Satisfaction on Health Service Delivery: A Case of Nhif Temeke

Vol 19 , Issue 1 , January - June 2018 | Pages: 17-30 | Research Paper  

https://doi.org/10.51768/dbr.v19i1.191201811


Author Details ( * ) denotes Corresponding author

1. * Gilliard Loth, Senior Lecturer, Vocational Education Training Authority, Tumaini University Dar es Salaam College, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, United Republic of (gilliard.loth@tudarco.ac.tz)
2. Nansanga Godwin, Assistant Lecturer, Vocational Education Training Authority, Tumaini University Dar es Salaam College, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, United Republic of

Purpose: The general objective of this paper was to assess customer service quality and customer satisfaction of health service delivery in Tanzania focusing on the hospitals that provide health services to the members of NHIF. Specifically, the paper addresses two issues: firstly, to examine customer satisfaction on the basis of services offered to the members of NHIF by the hospitals which were studied; and secondly, it attempts to measure the customer satisfaction level through SERVQUAL model dimensions.

Design/Methodology/Approach: The case study was used whereby data collection involved primary data and secondary data. In addition, the SERVQUAL model, which was proposed by Parasuraman, Zeithaml, & Berry (1988) was applied. The model presupposes that “service quality is the difference between expectations and performance relating to quality dimensions” (Dudo & Amankwah, 2011, p. 28).

Findings: The results show that, most of the respondents were dissatisfied with the services offered by selected hospitals under NHIF. The complaints escalated by the patients are mainly associated with timing of delivery and quality of services, corruption, and usage of inappropriate language by the hospital staff with the patients. The SERVQUAL model dimensions showed that, with respect to tangibility, 45.7% NHIF members who get health services from the selected hospitals were not satisfied with the environment and premises of the selected hospitals. With respect to reliability, the findings show that, 55.7% of NHIF members were not satisfied; and about 57.2% were not satisfied with the hospital employees’ timeliness in delivering services. The other attributes of the model indicated that minority of the respondents (28.6%), were not satisfied with the knowledge of employees. Finally, based on the empathy, the results indicate that 58.3% of NHIF members disagreed that the staff members understand the needs of the customers.

Research Limitations/Implications: This study was limited to one district i.e. Temeke in Dar es Salaam region in Tanzania. However, given the methodology used, the findings shed light on customer care and satisfaction in provision of health services for the members of National Health Insurance Fund.

Practical Implications: “If physical facilities, including cleanliness, modern equipment, and the general feeling that the hospital is in a good physical condition, are well perceived then patient satisfaction increases” (Naidu, 2009, p. 368). If the hospitals’ employees do not care for the needs of the customers, it would affect the customer satisfaction in the health service delivery. This necessitates the prompt resolution of the complaints raised by the customers in addition to provision of adequate information to them regarding the means of settlement of their grievances within the organization. In case the aggrieved customers are dissatisfied with the corrective action taken by the service provider in correspondence to their complaints, they should have the access to their rights of availing alternative remedies.

 Originality/Value: The researchers developed the title, objectives, and research questions, collected and analyzed data and the results of the research are as reported.

Keywords

Health Service Delivery, Customer Satisfaction.

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