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Doctors in majors, such as interns and residents of large hospitals, release their strikes from 7 am and return to the clinic after a while.

However, 86% of 4th graders in medical schools nationwide reject the national examination for doctors starting today (8th), and there is a possibility that this problem will revive as a spark of conflict between the medical community and the government.



Reporter Nam Joo-hyun reports.



<Reporter> At



an online conference for majors across the country yesterday, the Non-Captain of the Korean Association of Majors announced that all members will return to work from 7 o'clock this morning, but maintain the emergency response committee for each hospital.



At the same time, he declared that he would look carefully to see if the agreement with the government was implemented properly.



However, internal backlash remains.



The executive department, including Chairman Park Ji-hyun, resigned, saying that they did not reflect the opinions of all major doctors.



It is also an anxiety factor that 86% of fourth-year medical students who are required to take doctoral exams this year continue to refuse to accept the two postponed exams.



While the government is adamant that the re-application period is over and no additional applications are received, the Medical School Professors Association is concerned that if less than 2,700 doctors are produced next year, there will be a significant shortage of personnel in emergency rooms and operating rooms at university hospitals, and it will interfere with medical school education. Do it.



[Han Hee-cheol/President of the Korea Medical University Graduate School of Medicine Association: Since there are twice as many students per grade, there is no facility to accommodate them, and the quality of education is of course degraded.]



The Young Doctors Non-Capital said that the protection of medical students is a matter of agreement with the government.