City
Epaper

S. Korea to inject $294 mn next year to improve trainee doctor schemes

By IANS | Updated: August 30, 2024 17:05 IST

Seoul, Aug 30 The South Korean government plans to inject 400 billion won ($294 million) next year to ...

Open in App

Seoul, Aug 30 The South Korean government plans to inject 400 billion won ($294 million) next year to improve trainee doctor schemes, a presidential committee on medical reform said on Friday, amid a protracted walkout by junior doctors.

The planned spending aims to upgrade the quality of education for junior doctors, said Noh Yun-hong, head of the presidential committee, Yonhap news agency reported.

Over the next five years, the government plans to spend a total of 2 trillion won to improve trainee doctor schemes, Noh said.

"The government will continue efforts to seek actual improvements at training hospitals as the budget is implemented next year," Noh told reporters.

The committee also proposed increasing cost coverage rates by the state health insurance system in essential medical fields within three years.

The proposal aims to bolster compensation for six medical fields, including emergency rooms, paediatrics, and obstetrics.

The move is aimed at improving working conditions at hospitals at a time when thousands of trainee doctors have left their worksites in late February in protest of the government's push to increase the number of medical students.

The committee said it seeks to adjust cost coverage rates in some 3,000 treatment procedures over the next three years.

In addition, the committee said it will set up a new consultative body this year to discuss medical school enrollment quotas for 2026.

The government has already finalised a plan to increase the medical school quota by about 1,500 students next year to address the shortage of doctors in essential services.

The medical community has been reiterating that the government should fully reconsider the hike before engaging in any negotiations.

Last month, hospitals processed the resignations of nearly 7,700 trainee doctors who have been protesting the medical school quota increase since February, allowing departing doctors to seek new jobs and enabling hospitals to recruit fresh trainees.

However, the government's efforts to normalise the medical system encountered obstacles, as the medical community largely resisted hospitals' attempts to recruit new trainees.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessEmpowering Minds: The Rise of Artificial Intelligence in Education Curricula

Other Sports‘We’ll use this as a starting point’: Skipper Kane on England's five-goal win over Serbia

NationalMP CM to engage in dialogue with investors in Kolkata today

InternationalViolent protests will stop, we want new rules, regulations: Nepal 'Gen-z' protester

EntertainmentDeepika Padukone bakes cake for daughter Dua’s first birthday

International Realted Stories

International"India is right to continue to exercise its sovereignty": Geopolitical Expert on New Delhi's pushback on Trump's tariff

InternationalBritish PM condemns Israeli attack in Qatar

InternationalUNSC reforms essential for peacekeeping operations to be effective: India 

International"He is learning, oil not a tool of leverage, India not vulnerable," Geopolitical expert David Goldwyn on Trump's India tariff strategy

International"Navrro a fringe diplomat,": Leading geopolitical expert David Goldwyn criticises US trade advisor's rants