Viet Nam News

Some trainee doctors return to work amid protracted walkouts

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Some trainee doctors have returned to their worksites, a senior health ministry official said yesterday, amid prolonged walkouts by medical interns and residents against the government's plan to boost the number of medical students.

Second Vice Health Minister Park Min-soo stopped short of providing details on how many junior doctors returned to hospitals, but said, "Although not many, a small number of trainee doctors have returned."

It was unclear why some trainee doctors went back to hospitals, but media reports have said some junior doctors suffered financial difficulti­es due to the walkouts that began late February.

Park also renewed calls for junior doctors to return to hospitals, saying, "There is nothing that can be earned through the collective action. We urge them to return to their positions and take care of patients."

Earlier in the day, Park said the government expects no significan­t disruption­s in medical services despite medical professors taking one day off per week in solidarity with junior doctors.

Medical professors, who are senior doctors, at Asan Medical Centre and Seoul St. Mary's Hospital decided to take a day off yesterday, expressing fatigue from the prolonged walkout of junior doctors.

Some professors at Samsung Medical Centre, Severance Hospital, and Seoul National University Hospital also suspended surgeries and treatment for outpatient­s for a day earlier this week.

"While some medical professors vowed to take a day off on Friday, we expect no major disruption­s, including an all-out suspension of treatments," Park told reporters.

The five major hospitals play a critical role in treating critically ill patients in the country.

Other regional hospitals, including Chungbuk National

The government has been maintainin­g that it is also open to one-on-one dialogue with the medical community, but doctors have faced challenges in establishi­ng a uni ed representa­tive body.

University Hospital and Konyang University Hospital, also participat­ed in the move. The hospitals, however, noted that no outpatient treatments were scheduled for the day.

About 12,000 trainee doctors have left their worksites since February 20 in protest of the plan to boost the number of medical students by 2,000, causing delays in medical treatments, with some emergency rooms partially limiting their treatment of critically ill patients.

The government has formally launched a presidenti­al committee to resolve the standoff, but doctors boycotted it.

The government has been maintainin­g that it is also open to one-on-one dialogue with the medical community, but doctors have faced challenges in establishi­ng a unified representa­tive body.

"The government is leaving the spot open for the Korean Medical Associatio­n and trainee doctors at the medical reform committee," Park said, noting that the government is willing to engage in talks "anytime without formal constraint­s."

Meanwhile, local universiti­es have finalised their decisions to increase the combined medical school admission quota for next year by around 1,500 seats, less than the 2,000 slots the government had initially permitted.

The adjustment came after the government allowed schools to flexibly adjust their respective admission quotas for next year within the 50 per cent to 100 per cent range of their newly allotted quotas.

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