S Korea Begins Suspending Licenses Of 4900 Striking Doctors

South Korea said on Monday (Mar 11) it had started procedures to suspend the medical licences of 4,900 junior doctors who have resigned and stopped working to protest government medical training reforms, causing healthcare chaos.

The walkout, which started on Feb 20, is over government plans to sharply increase the number of doctors, which it says is essential to combat shortages and South Korea’s rapidly ageing population, while the medics argue it will erode service quality.

Nearly 12,000 junior doctors – 93 per cent of the trainee workforce – were not in their hospitals at the last count, despite government back to work orders and threats of legal action, forcing Seoul to mobilise military medics and millions of dollars in state reserves to help.

The Health Ministry on Monday said it had sent administrative notifications – the first step to suspending the doctors’ medical licences – to thousands of trainee doctors after they defied specific orders telling them to return to their hospitals.

“As of Mar 8 (notifications) have been sent to more than 4,900 trainee doctors,” Chun Byung-wang, director of the health and medical policy division at the health ministry, told reporters.

The government has previously warned striking doctors they face a three-month suspension of their licences, a punishment which, it says, will delay their ability to qualify as specialists by at least a year.

Chun urged the striking medics to return to their patients.

AFP

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