South Korea's medical professors join protests, reduce hours in practice
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[March 25, 2024]
By Hyunsu Yim
SEOUL (Reuters) - Medical professors in South Korea said they will cut
back on the hours they spend in practice starting on Monday to support
trainee doctors on strike for more than a month over a government plan
to boost medical school admissions.
"It is clear that increasing medical school admissions will not only
ruin medical school education but cause our country's healthcare system
to collapse," Kim Chang-soo, the president of the Medical Professors
Association of Korea, told reporters.
He said the professors will start scaling back outpatient treatment to
focus on emergency and severely ill patients, while some will submit
their resignations.
The strike by the trainee doctors over a plan to increase the number of
students admitted each year to medical school from 2025 has forced
several hospitals to turn back patients and delay procedures.
The government says the plan is vital to remedy a shortage of doctors in
one of the world's fastest-ageing societies, but critics have said the
authorities should focus on improving the working conditions of trainee
doctors first.
The trainee doctors have been on strike since Feb 20, and President Yoon
Suk Yeol, who has made healthcare reforms one of his signature policy
initiatives, has vowed not to back down on implementing the admissions
plan.
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Doctors chant slogans during a rally to protest against government
plans to increase medical school admissions in Seoul, South Korea,
March 3, 2024. The banners read "Oppose increasing medical school
admissions without talks with the medical community" (in blue) and
"Medical education will be harmed in increasing medical school
admissions" (in red). REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/ File Photo
The government has also threatened
to suspend the licenses of the doctors who have walked off their
jobs but on Sunday, Yoon appeared to seek a more conciliatory
approach and urged Prime Minister Han Duck-soo to seek "flexible
measures" in dealing with the suspension.
Yoon's office said he also ordered the prime minister to form a
"constructive consultative body" to speak with all medical
professionals.
According to a Gallup poll released on March 15, 38% said the
government was doing a good job dealing with backlash from doctors
and the medical void amid the doctors' strike while 49% said "not a
good job".
(Reporting by Hyunsu Yim; editing by Miral Fahmy)
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