(LEAD) Medical professors at Catholic University of Korea, Samsung Medical Center shelve plan on indefinite walkout


SEOUL, Medical professors at eight hospitals affiliated with the Catholic University of Korea and three hospitals affiliated with the Samsung Medical Center on Tuesday voted to shelve their plan on an indefinite walkout, following a decision by medical professors at Seoul National University to end their collective action.

The move came as expectations have grown over potential talks between the medical community and the government to resolve a monthslong standoff over medical reform.

The emergency committee of medical professors at the Catholic University said that about 70 percent of them voted in favor of alternative protest methods, such as reducing treatment for non-critical patients, instead of a walkout.

The committee, however, said 82 percent of the professors also vowed to join a walkout if necessary in the future.

“Hospitals of the Catholic University of Korea decided to put off an indefinite strike, although we will continue to protest and resist the government’s misguided policies in various
formats,” it added.

The emergency response committee of Sungkyunkwan University professors said the decision was made to postpone the walkout for some period after taking into consideration patients and the public. The professors work for the three hospitals affiliated with Samsung Medical Center — Samsung Seoul Hospital, Kangbuk Samsung Hospital and Samsung Changwon Hospital.

The latest decision came after medical professors at Seoul National University Hospital and its affiliates decided to end their indefinite strike last Friday, saying they could not put patients at risk anymore.

South Korea’s top doctors’ lobby group, the Korea Medical Association (KMA), also announced it will not begin an indefinite walkout Thursday as previously planned.

Medical professors at Asan Medical Center, which had earlier vowed to launch a walkout starting July 4, were seen closely monitoring situations at other hospitals as well.

“(The plan) is flexible depending on changes in the government’s stance,” an official from
the medical professors’ committee at Asan Medical Center said, hinting that doctors are considering maintaining treatments for critically ill patients.

Prospects for talks between the medical community and the government have been growing after Lim Hyun-taek, a hawkish head of the KMA, stepped back from the standoff, prompting the organization to form a special committee to initiate a dialogue.

Medical professors at three major hospitals of Yonsei University — Severance Hospital, Gangnam Severance Hospital, and Yongin Severance Hospital — however, have not yet announced a change to their plan to launch an indefinite walkout Thursday.

Source: Yonhap News Agency