KMA announces large-scale strike over medical reforms to take place on June 18
이 글자크기로 변경됩니다.
(예시) 가장 빠른 뉴스가 있고 다양한 정보, 쌍방향 소통이 숨쉬는 다음뉴스를 만나보세요. 다음뉴스는 국내외 주요이슈와 실시간 속보, 문화생활 및 다양한 분야의 뉴스를 입체적으로 전달하고 있습니다.
The Korean Medical Association (KMA) announced Sunday it will stage a general strike on June 18 to protest government reforms.
This will mark the first time that the KMA, the country's largest doctors' lobby group representing some 140,000 doctors, will be taking widespread collective action amid the ongoing junior doctors' walkout in protest of the government's move to hike medical school admissions quotas.
The KMA on Sunday revealed the results of a vote taken in the past week, from Tuesday to Friday, which showed that 90.6 percent of respondents supported a "strong protest" by the doctors' group.
In the online survey, 70,800 out of 111,861 doctors voted, and 52,015 people, or 73.5 percent, of respondents, said they would participate in collective action if asked.
"We will hold a general strike on June 18, with the participation of the entire nation, including 140,000 doctors, as well as medical students and parents," Lim Hyun-taek, head of the KMA, said Sunday. "We will declare the current medical abuse as an emergency for the entire medical community and wage a strong fight against the government."
He said this would be a "starting point" in the doctors' protests and called to form a special committee to fight for the medical community's cause.
Last month, the government finalized an increase of 1,500 in medical school admissions spots, the first such hike in 27 years. Since late February, thousands of trainee doctors have been protesting the government's decision, staging a walkout that has strained major hospitals' emergency rooms and nonessential medical services.
The June 18 strike date is a day after medical professors from Seoul National University's (SNUH) four hospitals said they would stage a walkout. Last Thursday, SNUH's medical professors said they would indefinitely suspend medical services from June 17, making an exception for emergency room patients and intensive care units. This has put a damper on the government's medical school reform plans.
Early on Sunday, Prime Minister Han Duck-soo said any collective action by the doctors was an "illegal act" that puts lives at risk. He expressed "deep regret," calling on doctors to return to dialogue.
"The social trust built between the medical community and patients over decades should not be destroyed in an instant due to the strong claims of a few people," Han said during a press briefing.
Han then assured that junior doctors who return to hospitals will not have to face any worries about any disadvantages or administrative measures.
However, less than 10 percent of doctors at private clinics joined the KMA's previous general strike in 2020, leading to cautious analysis that the impact of such collective action could be less serious than expected.
Civic groups, including those representing patients, called on the KMA to withdraw its decision on the same day.
BY SARAH KIM [kim.sarah@joongang.co.kr]
Copyright © 코리아중앙데일리. 무단전재 및 재배포 금지.
- YouTubers unveil alleged identities of Miryang gang rape assailants
- [WHY] Why do Koreans wait hours in line for baked treats?
- Estranged wife of SK chairman claims husband spent over 100 billion won on live-in partner
- Kim Yeon-koung gets star-studded send-off three years after quitting international volleyball
- North sends 330 trash balloons to South over weekend
- Explainer: Why Nvidia takes it all, Samsung trails behind in AI boom
- Song Ha-yoon's alleged victim provides more details of physical assault
- Samsung implements 64-hour workweek as falling sales usher crisis mode
- SK’s Chey admits to mistress and love child
- Brazil's 'Christ the Redeemer' statue dons hanbok for Korean culture event