China Daily

S. Korea sets deadline for striking young doctors

- AGENCIES VIA XINHUA

SEOUL — South Korea’s government on Monday told young doctors they had until the end of February to return to work or risk being punished for staging a weeklong protest that has disrupted services for patients at several major hospitals.

Two-thirds of the nation’s resident and intern doctors had walked off the job to protest a government plan to increase the number of students admitted to medical school in a bid to address what authoritie­s say is a shortage of doctors that is set to worsen in one of the world’s fastest aging societies.

The protest has forced hospitals to turn away patients and cancel procedures.

“Considerin­g the gravity of the situation, the government issues the last plea,” Safety Minister Lee Sang-min said at the opening of a task force meeting, adding that chaos was mounting in hospitals and emergency services had reached a “dangerous situation”.

“If you return to the hospital you left behind by Feb 29, you won’t be held responsibl­e for what has already happened,” he said.

“We urge you to remember your voice will be heard loudly and most effectivel­y when you are by the side of patients.”

The government has previously warned that it could take legal action against doctors who do not comply with a back-to-work order, including prosecutio­n, possible arrest and stripping them of their medical licenses.

The protesting doctors say the government should first address pay and working conditions before trying to increase the number of physicians.

Vice-Health Minister Park Minsoo said those who did not return by March 1 would face a minimum three-month suspension of their medical license among other legal actions.

Senior doctors and private practition­ers have not joined the walkout but have held rallies urging the government to scrap its plan to boost medical school quotas.

Many South Koreans support the plan, which has been spearheade­d by President Yoon Sukyeol.

In a package of policy plans to improve medical services, the government said it will increase the number of new medical students by 2,000 a year and expand legal protection against malpractic­e suits and prosecutio­n.

It also plans to give incentives for doctors to practice in essential discipline­s such as pediatrics and general surgery and in regional areas where a shortage of doctors is more serious.

Some doctors, however, say the government’s plan is aimed at winning more votes in the April general election. In a statement, medical professors at Seoul National University, which runs one of the top medical schools in the country, called on the authoritie­s to postpone discussing the plan until after the elections.

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