The Manila Times

SKorean senior doctors to resign as strike continues

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SEOUL: A group of South Korean senior doctors said on Saturday that they would resign starting March 25 in support of junior physicians in a nearly monthlong strike over the government’s planned medical training reforms that have plunged hospitals into chaos.

Thousands of trainee doctors stopped working on February 20 to protest government reforms aimed at easing doctor shortages by increasing the number of medical students, which the doctors claim is the final straw for overworked and underpaid earlycaree­r profession­als.

Crucial surgeries and treatments have been canceled, but the government says the East Asian country has so far avoided a full-blown crisis, thanks in part to nurses and senior doctors stepping up, as well as military physicians who have been sent in to help.

Representa­tives of medical professors at 20 universiti­es — who are also senior doctors at general hospitals — held a meeting on Friday night, with those at 16 institutio­ns “overwhelmi­ngly in favor” of supporting their junior colleagues, group head Bang Jae-seung said.

Professors at “each university have decided to voluntaril­y submit resignatio­n letters starting from March 25th,” Bang told reporters on Saturday.

But “we have reached a consensus that until the resignatio­n is finalized, each individual should do their best in the treatment of patients in their respective positions, just as they have done so far,” he said.

Bang did not disclose the exact number of professors expected to walk off the job on March 25th.

The Health Ministry reiterated this week that negotiatio­ns over the reform plans were out of the question, saying it would implement the health care reforms “without wavering.”

The government has ordered junior doctors to return or face legal action and has moved to suspend the medical licenses of those who refuse to comply, while offering incentives and setting up a hotline to support any who defy the walkout.

Seoul is pushing to admit 2,000 more students to medical schools annually from next year to address what it says is one of the lowest doctor-to-population ratios among developed nations.

Bang said doctors couldn’t agree to an increase of 2,000 more students under any circumstan­ces.

“We request the government once again: please reconsider the figure of 2,000. Without this, initiating any negotiatio­n will be impossible,” he said.

“If the current situation continues, it won’t be long before university hospitals collapse, dealing a significan­t and long-lasting blow to our country’s medical system,” he added.

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

This week, the junior doctors said they had submitted a “letter requesting emergency interventi­on” from the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on (ILO), claiming they were being “forced” by the government into unwanted labor. The government has dismissed the claim.

The reform plan enjoys broad public support, but a new poll by local media found that 34 percent of people wanted the government to negotiate to end the standoff.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? READY TO BE OCCUPIED
People walk past unused wheelchair­s near the entrance of a hospital in South Korea’s capital Seoul on Friday, March 15, 2024.
AFP PHOTO READY TO BE OCCUPIED People walk past unused wheelchair­s near the entrance of a hospital in South Korea’s capital Seoul on Friday, March 15, 2024.

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