"Waiting for the bread festival is okay. Can't you wait for the child's treatment?" What kind of nonsense is this?

2024.10.02 오후 01:44
Joo Su-ho, former chairman of the press and public relations committee of the Korean Medical Association / Yonhap News
Joo Su-ho, former chairman of the press and public relations committee of the Korean Medical Association (UIP) Emergency Response Committee, claimed, "In a society where waiting three hours to buy bread is a good story, and waiting for one's child's treatment is due to a lack of doctors, the collapse of essential medical care is natural."The former chairman of the committee

said on his SNS on the 1st, "It took hours just to enter the venue as a large crowd gathered at the bread festival held in Daejeon last weekend," adding, "The bread that the market waits for three hours as the best side dish cannot be bad."

"In a society where waiting for a child's treatment is due to a lack of doctors, the collapse of essential medical care is an 'automatic bread'," he said.

From the 28th to the 29th of last month, 81 famous bakeries across the country, including Daejeon's famous Seongsimdang, gathered in one place, attracting a large crowd.

According to the Daejeon Tourism Organization, which organized the bread festival, 140,000 people visited the festival and took two to three hours to enter.It is believed that the former chairman

made the remarks when citizens who do not mind waiting for three hours to buy bread complained about the prolonged hospital wait due to a lack of essential medical personnel.

Regarding the Korean Medical Association's earlier request to "change the doctor's license after two more years of education and put it into local public medical institutions that lack doctors," former chairman Joo said, "If you want to become a doctor, don't talk nonsense and enter medical school. You have to be a match to deal with this. He also criticized the cult, saying, "Go play somewhere else."

Meanwhile, Joo was summoned for the fourth time in July on charges of conspiracy to resign from a group of majors. Former chairman Joo denied the charges, saying, "The junior doctors, who judged that it would be meaningless to become specialists if medical schools were increased, gave up their major lives."

Reporter Park Sun-young of Digital News Team







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