The Korea Times

PA nurses to fill medical manpower gap amid gov’t-doctor conflict

Nurses allowed to perform CPR on emergency patients

- By Jun Ji-hye jjh@koreatimes.co.kr

The government is planning to make the most use of physician assistant (PA) nurses — unique to Korea’s medical field — to cope with disruption­s to medical services caused by a nationwide walkout by thousands of trainee doctors in protest against the government policy to increase the number of medical students next year.

The Ministry of Health and Welfare said Thursday that it decided to increase the role of nurses at emergency care units at general hospitals and training hospitals.

It will release relevant guidelines on Friday, enabling nurses with several years of experience to undertake specific responsibi­lities that are normally held by doctors, such as performing CPR and injecting medication into patients in a critical condition. The related pilot program was already launched on Feb. 27.

The guidelines, aimed at better clarifying the scope of nurses’ duties, are expected to give a boost to the legalizati­on of the PA nurse system, which is technicall­y illegal per the country’s Medical Service Act, but for all intents and purposes, has been operating as such for about 20 years .

“We will actively utilize PA nurses,” President Yoon Suk Yeol said on Wednesday while he presided over a government meeting to address the collective action of doctors.

“Through the pilot program, we will allow PA nurses to fill the medical service vacuum left by the striking trainee doctors and legally protect them.”

Doctors are protesting the government’s decision to raise the enrollment quota at 40 medical schools nationwide by an 2,000 places from the current 3,058 starting next year. This proposal is aimed at addressing a shortage of doctors and improving public access to medical services. However, doctors argue that the current education and training systems in medical schools are illequippe­d to accommodat­e such an expansion.

The government came up with the idea of utilizing PA nurses because patients and their families have had surgeries and other medical procedures postponed or reschedule­d due to the ongoing mass walkout by interns and resident doctors.

In other countries, such as the United States and Canada, PAs refer to licensed medical profession­als who examine, diagnose and treat patients under the supervisio­n of physicians.

Korea’s medical community uses the same title, but PAs in Korea refer to skilled nurses who assist doctors in carrying out operations and procedures, and take part in the developmen­t of treatment plans and even the prescripti­on of medication, most of which are responsibi­lities meant to be held by trainee doctors.

Korean hospitals have appointed skilled nurses as PAs since the early 2000s as part of efforts to cut costs, as PAs do not require additional courses or profession­al licenses.

The number of PA nurses is estimated at around 20,000 nationwide, according to the Korean Health and Medical Workers’ Union.

In April last year, a nursing bill, designed to clarify the roles and responsibi­lities of nurses, passed the National Assembly, railoaded by the the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea.

But Yoon vetoed the bill the following month, siding with doctors and other medical workers at the time, who claimed that the act would only divide the medical profession and cause conflict and confusion.

The Korean Nurses Associatio­n expressed a certain amount of expectatio­ns this time, supporting Yoon’s latest remarks concerning nurses.

“Nurses have been put into very difficult situations after trainee doctors left their worksites,” the associatio­n said in a statement. “We welcome the president’s promises to pay keen attention to the developmen­t of nurses’ careers so they can work with pride.”

In its expanded efforts to minimize the medical service vacuum, the health ministry also announced a decision to invest 188.2 billion won ($141 million) of national health insurance reserves per month to increase compensati­on for hospitals that actively treat patients in emergency and critical conditions.

 ?? Yonhap ?? Nurses walk down a hallway in a major hospital in Incheon, Thursday.
Yonhap Nurses walk down a hallway in a major hospital in Incheon, Thursday.

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