The Manila Times

SKorea moves to punish protesting junior doctors

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SEOUL: South Korea said on Monday it would take steps to suspend the licenses of striking trainee doctors who have defied orders to return to work in a standoff over medical training reforms.

About 9,000 junior doctors walked out nearly two weeks ago to protest an increase in medical school admissions from next year, which is meant to help combat shortages and meet the demands of an aging society.

The striking physicians have defied a February 29 government deadline for them to return to work or face legal action, including possible arrest or suspension of their medical licenses.

Despite repeated government appeals, the number returning to work “has been minimal,” Second Vice Health Minister Park Min-soo told a news conference.

“Starting today, the government is enforcing [a] legal measure,” he said, noting that inspection­s at hospitals nationwide would be conducted on Monday to find out who had returned or not.

If doctors’“absence is confirmed” from the on-site inspection­s, he said, the government would notify them that procedures to suspend their licenses were underway.

“If they violate the government’s back-to-work order, a three-month suspension is inevitable,” he added.

Such a suspension would lead to a delay of at least a year in getting a specializa­tion medical certificat­e, the minister warned, and negatively affect career prospects.

As of Thursday, nearly 9,000 trainee doctors, or 72 percent of the whole junior workforce, have walked out, Park said.

Only 565 doctors returned to work by the deadline, figures released by the Health Ministry showed.

The mass work stoppage has taken a toll on hospitals, with crucial treatments and surgeries canceled, prompting the government to raise its public health alert to the highest level.

About half of the surgeries scheduled at some major hospitals have been canceled since last week, according to the health ministry.

Under South Korean law, doctors are barred from striking, and the government has requested police investigat­e people connected to the stoppage.

Monday’s warning followed the government’s Thursday’s deadline for the trainee doctors to return to hospitals while remaining firm on its plan to increase medical school admissions by 65 percent.

While the ultimatum fell, the government would take into considerat­ion those who had since returned to work, Park said.

South Korea’s government is pushing to admit 2,000 more students to medical schools annually from next year to address what it calls one of the lowest doctor-to-population ratios among developed nations.

Doctors fear the reform would erode the quality of service and medical education, but proponents accuse the physicians of trying to safeguard their salaries and social status.

Polling shows up to 75 percent of the public support the reforms.

President Yoon Suk Yeol has taken a hard line on the striking doctors, and has seen his approval ratings tick up as the standoff drags on.

With legislativ­e elections in April, and Yoon’s party looking to win back a parliament­ary majority, the government is unlikely to compromise quickly, analysts said.

But doctors have also vowed not to back down, saying the government’s plan did not address the sector’s real problems.

“The government is very aware of the reasons all doctors are opposing the increase in the medical school admissions but are exploiting policies to turn doctors into slaves forever,” Kim Taek-woo of the Korea Medical Associatio­n said at a rally in the capital Seoul on Sunday.

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