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samedi 31 mai 2014

Factors To Consider When Renting Medical Equipment

By Lila Bryant


Medical facilities are faced with one of the most expensive and somehow sophisticated equipment investments. In order to have a significant impact on their clients, individuals and institutions that are engaged in practicing medical services are faced with the need of procuring the latest and state of the art equipment. However, with all this investment, the very tools are quickly rendered obsolete by the passage of time and the ever changing technology. It is therefore important and necessary to thoroughly analyze each and every investment decision in order to realize the most economical use of the scarce financial resources. This particularly entails a close comparison between making a purchase and renting medical equipment.

One can rent a wide variety of these instruments. Some of the tools you can rent include surgical implements, MRI machines, EMR software, computers, X-ray and ultrasound machines, imaging and diagnostic instruments, surgery tables among others. However, before embarking on this agreement, it is important to consider some vital factors, as illustrated below.

To begin with, it is important to first of all carry out a lease vs. Buy analysis. The analysis enables you to be sure that you are engaging in the best financial decision. The process entails comparing the item prices across different major manufacturers, against lease quotes obtained from numerous medical tools leasing companies.

But to enhance an inclusive financial analysis, be sure to collect all your pertinent financial data at your disposal. It is this information that will enable you to analyze and evaluate the feasibility of a particular investment. Determine the incremental cash flows (additional revenues and expenses) resulting from the investment. Incremental analysis will illustrate how a particular investment is going to improve the overall business performance, as opposed to simply analyzing whether or not a single portfolio will generate profit on its own or not.

The comparison should however not stop here. Further analyze the data with a break even analysis, a net present value analysis and a payback value analysis. With these analyses, you are furnished with both the short and long term financial implications of the particular investment. It also denotes the duration of time it will take to recoup the initial investment.

While comparing a buy versus rent decision, you should put in mind that the rate of the lease, is determined by some other factors, some within while others beyond your control. An example of a controllable factor is the rental period. Consider the duration of rent and the financial implication associated.

The frequency of repair of the concerned item must also be considered, together with the kind of lease to be adopted. The service schedule (the frequency and convenience of repair) of the tool ought to be put in mind. A good deal should entail fewer repairs, with the service being undertaken on-site. Leases can also be classified as capital and operating. Capital leases have capital allowances, with residual ownership of the equipment while, operating leases are purely rental agreements. As such, capital leases are relatively expensive.

Simply put, the decision process whether to rent or buy a medical equipment relies more on ascertaining which option will be more beneficial to your practice; the bottom line; evaluate how the investment fits with your general business plan, compare it to alternative opportunities in your practice and determine whether it will be profitable on its own while improving the present and future overall financial performance of your practice.




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