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    To walk the picket line

    AP – Thousands of junior doctors in South Korea have been refusing to see patients and attend surgeries since they walked off the job on February 20 in response to the government’s push to recruit more medical students.

    As of Tuesday, about 8,940 medical interns and residents have left their worksites in protest, disrupting the operations of major hospitals in South Korea and threatening to burden the country’s overall medical service. Now, authorities warned they have until today to return to work or face license suspensions and prosecutions.

    Here’s what’s happening with the strikes:

    WHY ARE DOCTORS STRIKING?

    The government plans to raise South Korea’s yearly medical school admission caps by 2,000, from the current 3,058.

    The enrollment plan is meant to add up to 10,000 doctors by 2035 to cope with the country’s fast-aging population. Officials said South Korea has 2.1 physicians per 1,000 people – far below the average of 3.7 in the developed world. The striking doctors-in-training say schools can’t handle an abruptly increased number of medical students.

    They predict doctors in greater competition would perform overtreatment – increasing public medical expenses – and, like current medical students, most of the additionally recruited medical students would also likely try to work in high-paying, popular professions like plastic surgery and dermatology.

    Doctors stage a rally against the government’s medical policy near the presidential office in Seoul, South Korea. PHOTO: AP
    ABOVE & BELOW: Photos show members of the Transport Workers’ Union and the Korean Public Service staging a rally at Seoul National University Hospital. PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP

    That means the country’s long-running shortage of physicians in essential yet low-paying areas like pediatrics, obstetrics and emergency departments would remain unchanged.

    Some critics said the striking junior doctors simply oppose the government plan because they worry adding more doctors would result in a lower income. Doctor-turned-lawmaker in the ruling party Ahn Cheol-soo said on a local TV programme that he supported the government’s plan.

    But without fundamental steps to convince students to opt for the essential areas, Ahn said “Two thousand new dermatology hospitals will be established in Seoul 10 years later”.

    WHAT DO THE STRIKES MEAN FOR PATIENTS?

    The walkouts have led hospitals to cancel numerous planned surgeries and other medical treatments.

    On Friday, an octogenarian undergoing cardiac arrest was reportedly declared dead after seven hospitals turned her away, citing a lack of medical staff or other reasons likely related to the walkouts.

    In some major hospitals, junior doctors account for about 30 to 40 per cent-of the total doctors, playing the role of supporting senior doctors during surgeries and dealing with inpatients. The strikers are among the country’s 13,000 medical residents and interns, and they work and train at about 100 hospitals in South Korea. In the wake of the walkouts, the government has extended the working hours for public medical institutions, opened emergency rooms at military hospitals to the public, and given nurses legal protection to conduct some medical procedures typically done by doctors.

    Vice Health Minister Park Min-soo said on Tuesday that the country’s handling of critical and emergency patients largely remains stable. But observers said the country’s overall medical service would suffer a major blow if the walkouts prolonged, or if senior doctors join the strike. The Korea Medical Association, which represents about 140,000 doctors in South Korea, has steadfastly expressed its support of the trainee doctors, though it hasn’t determined whether to join their walkouts. Spine surgeon in South Korea Park Jiyong said senior doctors at major university hospitals will likely join the walkout in coming days, which would “virtually collapse the operations of those hospitals.”

    WHAT’S NEXT?

    On Monday, Park, the vice health minister, said the government won’t seek any disciplinary steps against the striking doctors if they report back to work by today. But, he warned, anyone who missed the deadline would be punished with a minimum three-month suspension of their medical licenses and face further legal steps, such as investigations and indictments by prosecutors.

    Still, the strikers aren’t likely to back down soon.

    South Korea’s medical law allows the government to issue back-to-work orders to doctors when it sees grave risks to public health. Those who refuse to abide by such orders can have their medical licenses suspended for up to one year and also face up to three years in prison or a KRW30-million (roughly USD22,500) fine. Those who receive prison sentences would be stripped of their medical licenses.

    Some observers said authorities will probably limit punishment to strike leaders for fear of a further strain on hospital operations.

    Doctors are among the highest-paid professionals in South Korea, and the trainees’ walkout has so far failed to win public support, with a survey showing that about 80 per cent of respondents support the government’s recruitment plan.

    “What if your mother has to get an injection or die? It seems like those doctors never were in others’ shoes but are only emotional,” said 57-year-old cancer patient Kim Myung-ae.

    “They don’t care about the patients but only the benefits they get as doctors in this country.”

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