IANS | 03 Apr, 2024
The South Korean government is open to talks with doctors if they
come up with a unified and reasonable solution to resolve an impasse
over a reform to hike the number of medical students, a senior official
said on Tuesday.
The comments by Deputy Health Minister Jun
Byung-wang followed remarks a day earlier by President Yoon Suk Yeol
that doctors need to come up with a "unified proposal" on the
appropriate increase in medical school admissions, Yonhap news agency
reported.
However, Yoon said a hike of 2,000 medical students is the minimum, vowing not to back down from the number.
"The
government is willing to engage in discussions with an open mind if the
medical community proposes unified and more rational measures based on
scientific evidence and logic while discontinuing collective action,"
Jun told reporters.
"We hope doctors deliver their opinion in a rational manner while protecting their patients," Jun said.
About
12,000 trainee doctors have been on strike in the form of mass
resignations since February 20, with medical professors having submitted
resignations in support of the walkout.
Medical professors, who
are senior doctors at major hospitals, also began cutting their working
hours starting Monday to cope with growing fatigue caused by a
protracted walkout by junior doctors.