Jamaica Gleaner

Doctors hold massive anti-government rally over medical school recruitmen­t plan

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THOUSANDS OF senior doctors rallied in the South Korean capital, Seoul, on Sunday to express their support for junior doctors who have been on strike for nearly two weeks over a government plan to sharply increase the number of medical school admissions.

The rally came as the government said it would begin to take steps Monday to suspend the doctors’ licences of nearly 9,000 medical interns and residents for defying government orders to end their walkouts, which have disrupted hospital operations.

“The government’s absurd medical policy has triggered immense resistance by trainee doctors and medical students, and we doctors have become one,” Park Sung-min, a senior member of the Korea Medical Associatio­n (KMA), said in a speech at the rally. “I’m asking the government: Please, stop the threats and suppressio­n now.”

Protesters chanted slogans, sang and held placards criticisin­g the government’s plan. There were were no reports of violence.

As of Thursday night, 8,945 of the country’s 13,000 medical interns and residents were confirmed to have left their worksites, according to the Health Ministry. The government had said they would face minimum three-month licence suspension­s and indictment­s by prosecutor­s if they didn’t return by February 29.

The striking doctors are a fraction of South Korea’s 140,000 doctors. But they account for 30-40 per cent of the total doctors at some major hospitals, where they assist senior doctors during surgeries and other treatments while training. Their walkouts have subsequent­ly caused numerous cancellati­ons of surgeries and medical treatments at the hospitals.

Senior doctors have staged a series of rallies backing the young doctors, but haven’t joined the walkouts. If they also launch strikes, observers say that would be a major blow to South Korea’s medical service. Prime Minister Han Duck-soo on Sunday urged senior doctors to persuade the striking junior doctors to return to work.

Police said they were investigat­ing five ranking Korea Medical Associatio­n officials accused of inciting and abetting the junior doctors’ walkouts. Seoul police chief Cho Ji-ho told reporters Sunday that police had raided KMA offices as part of the investigat­ion.

The government wants to increase South Korea’s medical school enrolment quota by 2,000 starting next year, from the current 3,058, to better deal with the country’s rapidly ageing population. Officials say South Korea’s doctor-to-population ratio is one of the lowest among developed countries.

But many doctors have vehemently protested the plan, saying medical schools can’t handle such a sharp increase in the number of students. They say the recruitmen­t plan also does not address a chronic shortage of doctors in essential, but lowpaying specialiti­es like paediatric­s and emergency department­s. Doctors say adding too many new doctors would also increase public medical expenses since greater competitio­n would lead to excess treatments.

Without concrete plans on how to educate the newly added students, “the quality of medical education will plunge endlessly, resulting in a unsafe, low-quality medical service and eventually a collapse of the medical service of the Republic of Korea,” Lee Jeong-geun, acting leader of the Korea Medical Associatio­n, said at the rally.

The protests by doctors haven’t won public support, with a survey showing a majority of South Koreans support the government plan. Some critics say doctors – one of the best-paid profession­s in South Korea – simply worry about receiving a lower income due to the rising number of doctors.

 ?? AP ?? Doctors stage a rally against the government’s medical policy in Seoul, South Korea, on Sunday, March 3.
AP Doctors stage a rally against the government’s medical policy in Seoul, South Korea, on Sunday, March 3.

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