Korean trainee doctors face legal action
SOUTH Korea’s health minister said yesterday authorities will start inspecting hospitals in order to take legal action against trainee doctors who have ignored an ultimatum to end a walkout over government plans to increase medical school admissions.
Around 9,000 resident and intern doctors, or about 70 percent of the country’s total, have walked off the job since February 20, leading to the cancellation of some surgeries and treatments and putting a strain on emergency departments.
The government had warned the protesting trainee physicians they could face administrative and legal penalties, including the suspension of their medical licenses and fines or a jail term if they did not return to work by the end of last month.
“From today, we plan to conduct on-site inspections to confirm trainee doctors who have not returned, and take action according to the law and principle without exception,” Health Minister Cho Kyoo-hong told a televised briefing.
“Please keep in mind that doctors who have not returned may experience serious problems in their personal career path.”
For protesting doctors who returned to the field, Cho said the government would consider extenuating circumstances when contemplating any action against them.
Later, Vice Health Minister
Park Min-soo said the government would take steps to suspend the medical licenses of some 7,000 trainee doctors who had left their jobs.
Up to now, there has been little sign of either side backing down.
Thousands of South Korean doctors held a mass rally on Sunday organized by the Korean Medical Association, defying official calls for the trainee physicians to return to work.