Daily Sabah (Turkey)

South Korea orders doctors to return to work as strike grows

About 7,800 medical interns and residents in South Korea have walked off their jobs this week to protest the government’s push to recruit more medical students, causing cancellati­ons of surgeries and other treatments

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THE SOUTH Korean government yesterday officially ordered striking doctors to return to work, a step that could lead to legal punishment­s if the doctors do not end their walkouts, which have caused cancellati­ons of surgeries and other treatments at hospitals as thousands more joined protests that commenced earlier this week.

About 7,800 medical interns and residents in South Korea have walked off their jobs this week to protest the government’s push to recruit more medical students.

Officials say they want to increase the nationwide medical school admissions cap by 2,000 from next year to brace for South Korea’s rapidly aging population.

But doctors’ groups have refuted the plan, saying universiti­es aren’t ready to offer quality education to that many students. They also say the government’s plan would lead to increased public medical expenses since it lacks measures for how to raise low medical fees in some key profession­s.

The 2,000 additional admissions “is a nonsensica­l figure,” the Korean Intern Residents Associatio­n said in a statement on Tuesday. “We hope the government will rethink its plan and formulate a policy that reflects the voices of trainee doctors.”

Junior doctors typically support senior doctors during surgeries and treat patients in hospitals. Their joint walkouts have burdened hospital operations. The Health Ministry said yesterday that authoritie­s have received 58 public complaints over the walkouts, mostly regarding indefinite delays of surgeries and cancellati­ons of other medical treatments.

The government yesterday accused the trainee doctors of putting their rights before the lives of patients.

“The fundamenta­l responsibi­lity of medical personnel is caring for the lives and health of the people. I would say once again that any collective action that threatens this cannot be justified,” Vice Health Minister Park Min-soo told reporters.

The media reports said emergency rooms in South Korea were overcrowde­d yesterday, with major hospitals having to cancel scheduled surgeries after thousands of trainee doctors joined a protest walkout.

Apart from overcrowde­d emergency rooms, five major hospitals in Seoul, the capital, had to cancel between a third and a half of scheduled surgeries, media said.

Park said that as of Tuesday night, about 8,820 out of the country’s 13,000 trainee doctors have submitted resignatio­ns to their hospitals. None of their resignatio­ns has been approved, but about 7,810 of the doctors have left their work sites, Park said.

Park said the government issued an official order for most of the striking doctors to return to work.

“The police and the prosecutor­s’ office will consult and take measures against any group or individual­s who are leading collective action, including arrest and investigat­ion,” Safety Minister Lee Sang-min told a news conference, according to a Reuters report.

South Korea’s medical law allows the government to issue such back-towork orders to doctors and other medical personnel when there are concerns about public health. If they refuse to abide by the order, they could face up to three years in prison or 30 million won ($22,480) in fines, a punishment that would also lead to the revocation of their medical licenses, according to the law.

Park didn’t detail possible punishment­s but said the government would enforce the law in a principled manner. He called for dialogue with the striking doctors.

Trainee doctors said the government’s return-to-work order was intimidati­on and must be withdrawn immediatel­y.

To deal with the trainee doctors’ walkouts, the government has opened military hospitals to the public, extended the operating hours of public medical institutio­ns and had emergency medical treatment centers stay open around the clock. But observers say if the walkouts are prolonged or joined by senior doctors, that could cause major disruption­s in South Korea’s overall medical service.

South Korea has a total of 140,000 doctors. The Korea Medical Associatio­n said it plans to hold rallies to support the trainees but hasn’t determined whether to launch strikes.

The country’s population of 52 million had 2.6 doctors per 1,000 people in 2022, far below the average of 3.7 for peers in the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD).

One group participat­ing in the protest, the Korean Intern Residents Associatio­n, said the doctors deserved better treatment, including more pay.

It criticized the plan for more medical school students as a political ploy ahead of a general election in April.

“We couldn’t just sit back and watch medical policies built only for the sake of winning the general election,” it said in a statement.

 ?? ?? Medical workers walk at Severance Hospital in Seoul, South Korea, Feb. 21, 2024.
Medical workers walk at Severance Hospital in Seoul, South Korea, Feb. 21, 2024.

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