South Korean hospitals extend working hours to tackle doctors' protest
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[February 23, 2024]
By Ju-min Park and Jack Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) -Public hospitals in South Korea will extend working
hours, the prime minister said on Friday, while expanding use of
telemedicine to alleviate growing strain on healthcare services after a
mass walkout by thousands of trainee doctors this week.
Hospitals have turned away patients and cancelled surgeries after about
two-thirds of the country's young doctors walked off the job to protest
against a government plan for more admissions to medical schools,
prompting fears of further disruption.
"The operation of public medical institutions will be raised to the
maximum," Prime Minister Han Duck-soo told a disaster management
meeting, saying such hospitals would stay open longer as well as on
weekends and holidays to take in the overflow.
As the walkout entered its fourth day, the health ministry said it was
allowing all hospitals and clinics to offer telemedicine services, such
as consultations and prescriptions, until now available only a limited
basis.
More than 7,800 interns and resident doctors have walked out, the
ministry added.
That is just a fraction of the country's 100,000 doctors, but they have
a key role in daily operations at teaching hospitals, where they can
make up more than 40% of staff, as cost savings make them attractive for
larger hospitals.
They perform crucial tasks in emergency rooms, intensive care units and
operating rooms at large hospitals that treat patients referred by
smaller hospitals and private clinics.
Nurses warned they were being forced to carry out procedures in wards
and operating theatres that are normally the preserve of trainee
doctors.
"The primary responsibility of anyone in the medical profession is to
care for the patients' health and life," said Tak Young-ran, the
president of the Korean Nursing Association, urging the doctors to
return to work.
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Doctors take part in a protest against a plan to admit more students
to medical school, in front of the Presidential Office in Seoul,
South Korea, February 22, 2024. REUTERS/Kim Soo-Hyeon
The growing pressure on hospitals
spurred the government to raise its health alert to "severe" from
"cautious" on Friday, after emergency departments in the biggest
hospitals have been squeezed since the protest began on Tuesday.
The protesting doctors say the real issue is pay and working
conditions, not the number of physicians.
But the government plan aims to remedy a shortage of as many as
15,000 doctors expected by 2035, among one of the world's
fastest-ageing populations, where physicians, too, are greying.
Senior doctors and the Korean Medical Association, which represents
private practitioners, have stayed out of the walkout but held
rallies urging the government to scrap its plan. Another large rally
is expected on Sunday in Seoul, the capital.
The prime minister renewed a call to the young doctors not to
tarnish by their actions the memory of their sacrifice and
dedication during the COVID-19 pandemic that had won them the
respect of the public.
He asked those in the medical community to stop "pushing young
doctors" and said the government was always open to talks.
Many Koreans support the plan for more medical school admissions,
with a recent Gallup Korea poll showing about 76% of respondents in
favour, regardless of political affiliation.
(Reporting by Ju-min Park; Editing by Ed Davies and Clarence
Fernandez)
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