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Yoon says medical licenses should not be used as tool against people

March 19, 2024 - 11:44 By Yonhap
President Yoon Suk Yeol speaks during a Cabinet meeting at the presidential office in Seoul on Tuesday. (Yonhap)

President Yoon Suk Yeol lamented the ongoing walkout by junior doctors on Tuesday, saying their medical licenses should not be used as a tool against the people.

Yoon made the remark during a Cabinet meeting as thousands of trainee doctors remained off their jobs for a month to protest the government's plan to increase admissions to medical schools by 2,000 starting next year.

The government has stood by the plan, citing the need to supply more physicians especially to rural areas and essential medical fields, while doctors' groups have demanded the shortage be addressed by better compensating underpaid specialists and other means.

"The medical reform in front of us is our duty to the people, as well as the people's command," Yoon said during the meeting at the presidential office, making clear he would not back down.

"It is truly regrettable that certain doctors, who should remain by patients' sides and persuade trainee doctors, who are their juniors, are neglecting the people's desire for medical reform and failing to properly fulfill their duty as doctors and teachers," he said.

The government has sent prior notices to junior doctors taking part in the walkout that their medical licenses will be suspended if they fail to return to work. The standoff has shown little signs of a breakthrough, however, as medical professors have resolved to join the collective action by submitting their resignations next Monday.

"Medical licenses that have been granted to save the people's lives should not be used as a tool to threaten and cause anxiety among the people," Yoon said, recalling his visit to a hospital the previous day and the medical staff he witnessed continuing to provide treatment. "I hope the medical staff who have left the patients' sides will return to the patients' sides like them."

Yoon said a special presidential committee on medical reform will be launched in April to enable dialogue between doctors' groups and the government.

He also promised to host debates on medical reform issues similar to the people's livelihood debates he has led since the start of the year.

Among the other topics he addressed were rising consumer prices, which have been seen most clearly in the high-flying prices of apples, pears and other farm products.

Yoon urged the government to make utmost efforts to lower inflation to the 2 percent range and to mobilize all available policy means, including encouraging direct dealings of agricultural products, providing food vouchers to vulnerable groups and cracking down on unfair practices in the distribution process. (Yonhap)