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South Korea
AsiaEast Asia

South Korea to send military doctors to hospitals amid doctors’ protest

  • Starting next month, doctors serving in the military and at local clinics in lieu of mandatory military service will be assigned to hospitals affected by the walkout
  • Two-thirds of residents and intern doctors had walked off the job to protest a government plan to increase the number of students admitted to medical school

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Members of the Korea Medical Association stage a rally against the government’s medical policy near the presidential office in Seoul, South Korea on Wednesday. Photo: AP
Reuters
South Korea will send its military and community doctors to hospitals within the next few days as part of emergency measures to support the healthcare system after a mass walkout by trainee doctors, Prime Minister Han Duck-soo said on Wednesday.

Han also pleaded with the young doctors to return to work by a Thursday deadline set by the government, and said the authorities would listen to their concerns.

“The government fully understands that trainee doctors have serious concerns about the work environment and future career, and we are seeking measures to improve this from a number of perspectives,” he told a government meeting.

Two-thirds of the nation’s residents and intern doctors had walked off the job to protest a government plan to increase the number of students admitted to medical school in a bid to address what authorities say is a shortage of doctors.

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The young doctors who are protesting say the government should first address pay and working conditions before trying to increase the number of physicians.

The government has warned it could suspend the licenses of the doctors who do not comply with the back-to-work order.

South Korea’s health ministry announced a measure to allow nurses to conduct some roles of doctors under legal protection to fill the medical vacuum caused by a prolonged walkout by nearly 10,000 trainee doctors. Photo: EPA-EFE
South Korea’s health ministry announced a measure to allow nurses to conduct some roles of doctors under legal protection to fill the medical vacuum caused by a prolonged walkout by nearly 10,000 trainee doctors. Photo: EPA-EFE

Starting next month, doctors who are serving in the military and at local clinics in lieu of mandatory military service will be assigned to hospitals affected by the walkout, Han said.

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