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Seoul gives young doctors 4 days to end walkouts, threatenin­g prosecutio­ns or suspended licenses

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Junior doctors in South Korea have four days to end their walkouts, the government said on Monday, or they could face prosecutio­n or have their medical licenses suspended.

About 9,000 medical interns and residents have stayed off the job since early last week to protest a government plan to increase medical school admissions by about 65%. The walkouts have severely hurt the operations of their hospitals, with numerous cancellati­ons of surgeries and other treatments.

Government officials say adding more doctors is necessary to deal with South Korea’s rapidly ageing population. The country's current doctor-to-patient ratio is among the lowest in the developed world.

The strikers say universiti­es can’t handle so many new students and argue the plan would not resolve a chronic shortage of doctors in some key but low-paying areas like paediatric­s and emergency department­s.

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Vice Health Minister Park Minsoo said during a televised briefing Monday that the government won’t seek any disciplina­ry action against striking doctors if they return to work by Thursday.

“We want them to return to work by the end of this month, February 29. If they return to the hospitals they had left by then, we won’t hold them responsibl­e” for any damages caused by their walkouts, Park said. “It's not too late. Please, return to patients immediatel­y.”

But he said those who don't meet the deadline will be punished with a minimum threemonth suspension of their medical licenses and face further legal steps such as investigat­ions and possible indictment­s.

Under South Korea’s medical law, the government can issue back-to-work orders to doctors and other medical personnel when it sees grave risks to public health. Refusing to abide by such an order can bring suspension­s of their licenses and up to three years in prison or 30 million won (€20,803) in fines. Those who receive prison sentences would be stripped of their medical licenses.

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Why are South Korean junior doctors striking?

There are about 13,000 medical interns and residents in South Korea, most of them working and training at 100 hospitals. They typically assist senior doctors during surgeries and deal with inpatients. They represent about 30% to 40% of total doctors at some major hospitals.

The Korea Medical Associatio­n, which represents about 140,000 doctors in South Korea, has said it supports the striking doctors but hasn't determined whether to join the trainee doctors' walkouts. Senior doctors have held a series of rallies voicing opposition to the government's plan in recent days.

Earlier this month, the government announced universiti­es would admit 2,000 more medical students starting next year, from the current 3,058. The government says it aims to add up to 10,000 doctors by 2035.

Striking doctors have said they worry doctors faced with increased competitio­n would engage in overtreatm­ent, burdening public medical expenses.

A public survey showed that about 80% of South Koreans back the plan. Critics suspect doctors, one of the best-paid profession­s in South Korea, oppose the recruitmen­t plan because they worry they would face greater competitio­n and lower incomes.

Park said the country's medical service for emergency and critical patients remains stable, with public medical facilities extending their working hours and military hospitals opening emergency rooms to ordinary patients. But local media reported that an octogenari­an suffering a cardiac arrest was declared dead last Friday after seven hospitals turned her away citing a lack of medical staff or other reasons likely related to the walkouts.

Hwang Byung-tae, a 55-yearold laryngeal cancer patient, said he has regularly visited a Seoul hospital for treatment for four years. Last week, he said he had to leave the hospital without receiving an anti-cancer injection because of the walkouts.

Hwang accused both the government and doctors of holding the lives of patients hostage. “It’s patients like me who end up suffering and dying, not them,” Hwang said.

 ?? ?? Doctors march toward the presidenti­al office during a rally against the government's medical policy in Seoul, South Korea, February 25, 2024.
Doctors march toward the presidenti­al office during a rally against the government's medical policy in Seoul, South Korea, February 25, 2024.
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