The Koreas

South Korean Doctors Should Return to Duty

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The Koreas | Opinion | East Asia

South Korean Doctors Should Return to Duty

They are jeopardizing patients’ lives to safeguard their own privilege.

South Korean Doctors Should Return to Duty

Doctors stage a rally against the government’s medical policy in Seoul, South Korea, March 3, 2024.

Credit: AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon

At the time of writing, some 12,000 medical interns and residents have quit their hospitals in South Korea. That’s 92 percent of all medical trainees in the country. Physicians and nurses are plodding through a string of shifts without a break. Medical schools have postponed their spring term as most of their students have refused to come to class – the more they delay their return, the later they become doctors, while hamstringing the schools’ capacity to admit new medical students.

The trainees are rearing up against the government’s decision to increase the annual college quota for medical degrees by 2,000 starting from the 2025 academic year. In 2006, admission was capped at 3,058 and hasn’t budged since.

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