South Korea Doctors' Strike: Govt seems to set aside plans for punitive actions

Published On 2024-05-06 09:15 GMT   |   Update On 2024-05-06 09:16 GMT

Seoul: The South Korean government appears to have adjusted its strategy amidst an ongoing standoff with major doctors' associations, backing away from punitive measures against striking trainee doctors and scaling back plans to increase medical school admission quotas, officials revealed on Sunday.Still, the doctors' associations remained adamant over the issue and renewed their call for...

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Seoul: The South Korean government appears to have adjusted its strategy amidst an ongoing standoff with major doctors' associations, backing away from punitive measures against striking trainee doctors and scaling back plans to increase medical school admission quotas, officials revealed on Sunday.

Still, the doctors' associations remained adamant over the issue and renewed their call for the government to revisit the medical reform from scratch, despite some signs of an internal split, reports Yonhap News Agency.

According to an IANS news report, During a media briefing last week, Second Vice Health Minister Park Min-soo said the government has decided to grant local universities autonomy in deciding their medical school quota by a range of 50 to 100 per cent for the 2025 academic year in a bid to break the monthslong deadlock, the officials said.

Also Read:South Korea Doctors Strike: PM again urges medical professors to stay with patients

Additionally, the government has delayed the suspension of licenses for doctors who have been inactive for months under its "flexible disposition" policy since late March.

No executive order has been issued for medical school professors who have resigned alongside their students. 

These decisions are perceived as a compromise compared to the government's initial proposal to raise medical school admissions by 2,000 students starting in 2025, intended to address concerns arising from the nation's low birthrate and aging population, including a shortage of medical services in rural areas.

The government's decision triggered a protest from over 90 per cent of the country's 13,000 trainee doctors, who walked away from their duties at general hospitals since February.

However, despite some internal disagreements, doctors' organizations are unified in their demand for the government to abandon the proposed increase and devise a new strategy from scratch.

Lim Hyun-taek, the new head of the Korean Medical Association (KMA), a well-known hardliner, has repeatedly slammed the government in strongly worded statements and insisted on invalidating the increase in admissions, news agency IANS reported

"The plan to increase enrollment by 2,000 medical school students is not a solution for problems in the medical sector," Lim said in an event on Saturday, highlighting the need for a comprehensive reevaluation of the proposed policies.

Park Dan, the leader of a trainee doctors' group and known for his hawkish stance, criticised Lim for trying to form a consultative body of trainee doctors and medical students in an effort to start a dialogue with the government without their consent.

"Our trainee doctors' groups haven't discussed the issue," he said. "We are worried about Lim's arbitrary decision."

He added that trainee doctors and medical students will make their own decisions and go independent.

As the walkout of trainee doctors at hospitals has lasted for more than two months, medical professors, who are senior doctors at major hospitals and have filled in the vacancies, started to take a day off last week, expressing fatigue from the prolonged walkout of junior doctors.

Some professors at Samsung Medical Center, Severance Hospital and Seoul National University Hospital also suspended surgeries and treatment for outpatients for one day last week.

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