South Korea doctors’ protest disrupts hospital services

Doctors and medical workers taking part in a protest in front of the Presidential Office in Seoul, on Feb 21. Protesters are calling for better pay and work conditions before recruiting more medical students. PHOTO: REUTERS
Doctors and medical workers taking part in a protest in front of the Presidential Office in Seoul, on Feb 21. One group has critised the plan for more medical school students as a political ploy. PHOTO: REUTERS
A patient at Severance Hospital in Seoul, on Feb 21. Five major hospitals in the capital have had to cancel between a third and half of scheduled surgical procedures. PHOTO: REUTERS
A patient at Severance Hospital in Seoul on Feb 21. The health ministry says 7,813 doctors have walked out since the protests began this week. PHOTO: REUTERS
A patient is wheeled at Pusan National University Hospital in Busan on Feb 21. A minister has warned that the walkout by doctors posed a danger to seriously ill patients. PHOTO: REUTERS

SEOUL – Emergency rooms in South Korea are overcrowded, with major hospitals having to cancel scheduled surgical procedures, after thousands of trainee doctors joined a protest walkout on Feb 21, media said, as a minister warned of danger to seriously ill patients.

The walkout, prompted by a government plan to admit more students to medical school, could threaten people’s lives and safety, the authorities said, while threatening an investigation and the possible arrest of those responsible.

“The police and the prosecutors’ office will consult and take measures against any group or individuals who are leading collective action, including arrest and investigation,” safety minister Lee Sang-min told a news conference.

Apart from overcrowded emergency rooms, five major hospitals in Seoul, the capital, were having to cancel between a third and a half of scheduled surgical procedures, media said.

The health ministry says 7,813 doctors have left their jobs since the protests began this week, defying a government order to stay at work, a step the doctors call unconstitutional.

Vice-health minister Park Min-soo urged them to prioritise patients over collective action. “The basic calling of medical professionals is to protect the health and lives of the people, and any group action that threatens that cannot be justified,” he told reporters.

To boost healthcare in remote areas and meet growing demand in one of the world’s most rapidly ageing societies, the government wants to boost medical school admissions to 5,000 from the 2025 academic year, against 3,000 now, and to add 10,000 more doctors by 2035.

However, the protesters say South Korea has enough doctors, and call instead for better pay and work conditions, particularly for specialists in key areas such as paediatrics and emergency medicine, before recruiting more students.

About 76 per cent of South Koreans back the government’s plan to increase the number of medical students, a Gallup Korea poll showed last week, amid concerns over staff shortages outside the greater Seoul area.

South Korea’s population of 52 million had 2.6 doctors per 1,000 people in 2022, far below the average of 3.7 of peers in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

One group participating in the protest, the Korea Interns and Residents Association, said the doctors deserved better treatment, including more pay. It criticised the plan for more medical school students as a political ploy ahead of a general election in April.

“We couldn’t just sit back and watch medical policies built only for the sake of winning the general election,” it said in a statement. REUTERS

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