South Korea declares emergency medical response amid doctors' strike
South Korea declared a special emergency medical response ahead of a national holiday period to ensure services amid a doctors’ strike.
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea on Thursday declared a special emergency medical response period for two weeks in September and said it would use all available resources to ensure services, as a strike by young doctors increases strains on the medical system.
The government will also temporarily raise the fees doctors receive from health insurance around a national holiday period next week to “repay the dedication of the medical professionals even a little,” Prime Minister Han Duck-soo told a televised briefing.
This includes raising by 3.5 times the examination fees specialist doctors receive at regional emergency medical centers, responsible for severe emergency patients, Han said.
South Korea’s health ministry said last week it was deploying military doctors to assist in some hospital emergency rooms due to a shortage of medical staff, but disputed a warning by some physicians that the system was on the verge of collapse.
Thousands of trainee doctors, including interns and resident doctors, walked off the job in February to protest a plan to lift medical student numbers by 2,000 a year to meet what the government projects will be a severe shortage of doctors.
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