South Korean patients urge doctors to end walkout

South Korean patients urge doctors to end walkout

Members of South Korean patient advocacy groups hold up placards reading “Normalization of medical services” during a rally against doctors’ strike in Seoul on July 4, 2024. Over 100 South Korean patient advocacy groups gathered for a protest in Seoul, on July 4, urging physicians to halt their prolonged strike that has been affecting public health services. Agence France-Presse

SEOUL — Hundreds of South Korean patient rights advocates gathered Thursday to urge physicians to halt a prolonged strike that has affected public health services.

Thousands of trainee doctors stopped working in February, protesting against government plans to increase medical school quotas which they say will affect the quality of specialist education.

The strike has caused disruptions in hospitals and forced delays or cancellations of key treatments, including chemotherapy.

READ: Overworked and unheard, South Korean doctors on mass walkout

On Thursday around 300 protesters gathered in the capital to call for the strike to end, and for laws to prevent further industrial action.

“… we could no longer bear the continuing damage and anxiety,” a statement by the organizers said.

“Under no circumstances should medical services for patients be suspended.”

Kim Jeong-ae, whose daughter is struggling for treatment for a rare syndrome, said patients were being used as “pawns” by the medical community.

READ: South Korea publicly orders some doctors who walked off the job back to work

“Would you do this if the patients were your sons and daughters?” she said, her head shaved as a protest gesture.

In May, the government finalized an admission quota hike of around 1,500 for medical schools for 2025, which it says will tackle shortages of doctors and a rapidly aging population.

Senior doctors and medical professors at some of the nation’s key medical institutions recently joined the indefinite walkout in solidarity.

Doctors at some of the country’s largest medical facilities have also suspended outpatient treatments and non-emergency surgeries.

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