A relevant source at the South Korean presidential office said on March 25 that the government originally planned to apply administrative sanctions such as revocation of physician licenses to interns and inpatients who did not return to work starting on the 26th, but President Yoon Seok-yook said that “dialogue with the medical community should be flexible,” so the revocation of physicians' licenses will not be imposed on doctors who have not returned to work starting on the 26th. Han Dong-hoon, chairman of the Extraordinary Countermeasures Committee of South Korea's ruling National Power Party, held discussions with South Korea's National Medical University Professors' Association on the 24th. Afterwards, he submitted a report to Yoon Seok-yook requesting “flexible handling of administrative sanctions such as leaving work for internships and revocation of physician licenses by resident doctors.”

Zhitongcaijing · 03/25 11:17
A relevant source at the South Korean presidential office said on March 25 that the government originally planned to apply administrative sanctions such as revocation of physician licenses to interns and inpatients who did not return to work starting on the 26th, but President Yoon Seok-yook said that “dialogue with the medical community should be flexible,” so the revocation of physicians' licenses will not be imposed on doctors who have not returned to work starting on the 26th. Han Dong-hoon, chairman of the Extraordinary Countermeasures Committee of South Korea's ruling National Power Party, held discussions with South Korea's National Medical University Professors' Association on the 24th. Afterwards, he submitted a report to Yoon Seok-yook requesting “flexible handling of administrative sanctions such as leaving work for internships and revocation of physician licenses by resident doctors.”