South Korea's health ministry has urged medical professors not to resign in support of their students' strike, worsening the health crisis.
"If professors also resign, there is no way for interns who have left their workplaces to return," Vice Health Minister Park Min-soo said on the morning of March 13.
Park said medical professors would “lose patients” if they resigned en masse, and suggested the government was ready to sit down at the negotiating table. He said South Korea would do its utmost to prevent the professors from resigning. The government cannot maintain the current state of emergency if medical professors act like resident doctors.
The Vice Health Minister’s remarks come as a growing number of medical school professors are threatening to resign en masse unless the government takes concrete steps to improve the situation. Specifically, on March 11, professors at Seoul National University’s medical school planned to resign en masse this week. Medical professors at Catholic University also warned that they would continue to suspend surgeries and reduce treatment for both inpatients and outpatients.
South Korean doctors protest in Seoul on March 3 against the government's increase in medical school admissions quotas. Photo: AFP
On March 12, representatives from 19 medical schools gathered in an online meeting to consider a course of action, deciding to take opinions until the evening of March 15. On the same day, the government decided to provide 94.8 billion won ($72.2 million) to public hospitals this year to address the persistent shortage of human resources.
The residents’ strike began on February 20, when the South Korean government said it was necessary to increase the number of medical students by 2025 because the country has the lowest doctor-to-population ratio among developed countries. This would improve medical services in remote areas and meet the needs of the country’s rapidly aging population.
Contrary to the government’s view, resident doctors say the country does not need more doctors because there are already enough, and that increasing enrollment will reduce the quality of training and medical services, arguing that the population is declining and that Koreans have easy access to medical services. They call on the government to address the low salaries and benefits for specialists and improve legal protection against excessive medical malpractice lawsuits, rather than dramatically increasing the quota.
Thuc Linh (According to Yonhap )
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