The Korea Herald

S. Korea to let doctors with foreign licenses practice

- By Park Jun-hee

The Health Ministry said Wednesday that it would allow those holding foreign medical licenses to practice medicine in South Korea to help cope with a health care crisis exacerbate­d by a walkout by junior doctors. ʇ

The ministry said it would make revisions to the enforcemen­t regulation of the Medical Service Act, adding “medical support” to the list of tasks that foreign medical license holders can perform to address the shortage of medical personnel in the event of a medical disaster that could harm the lives and health of the public.

Under the revised act, those with medical licenses from foreign countries will be allowed to provide medical services upon the approval of the health minister.

The surprise announceme­nt comes as junior doctors’ walkout enters its 12th week, and some medical professors, who double as senior doctors at major hospitals, are resigning or taking weekly breaks in a show of protest against the government’s decision to add more slots in the medical school admissions quota starting next year.

The ministry said it made the prior legislativ­e notice on this day to collect opinions until May 20.

Currently, Article 18 of the Medical Service Act stipulates that a person who has graduated from a foreign school and has been licensed by a competent foreign authority must stay

in Korea for a certain time to perform medical practices with the approval of the Health Minister.

Those include exchange professor’s work as part of educationa­l or technical cooperatio­n with foreign countries, work for educationa­l research projects and medical service work as internatio­nal medical volunteer groups.

The ministry, however, declined to comment on the scope of medical practices foreign license holders could perform when asked for further details on the plan but said they would be allowed to provide services “deemed necessary” by the Health Minister during the crisis.

It also declined to provide informatio­n on when the scheme would possibly make its start and to which medical institutio­ns they would be dispatched during a crisis, explaining that it would announce specifics later on.

The South Korean government elevated the country’s health care crisis level to “serious” on Feb. 23 at 8 a.m. for the first time uring intern and resident doctors’ departure. The highest level of seriousnes­s in the four-tier warning system had previously been issued during the COVID-19 pandemic over a spike in confirmed cases.

Military surgeons and public health doctors have been deployed to fill in the medical gaps as doctors are showing little signs of return.

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