The Korea Herald

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No more for-profit hospitals under current administration: health minister

By Yonhap

Published : Dec. 6, 2018 - 17:06

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The incumbent Moon Jae-in administration will never authorize the opening of another for-profit hospital, South Korea's welfare minister said Thursday, amid brewing controversy surrounding the first-ever such approval by the Jeju provincial government.

On Wednesday, the Jeju Special Self-Governing Province gave a green light to a new Greenland International Hospital on condition that it caters only to foreign patients.


Health and Welfare Minister Park Neung-hoo (Yonhap) Health and Welfare Minister Park Neung-hoo (Yonhap)

"This approval is a unique situation as the approval for the opening of a hospital on Jeju Island can be decided by the self-governing province in accordance with the relevant law," Health and Welfare Minister Park Neung-hoo said during a parliamentary meeting.

Under existing law, the South Korean government permits for-profit hospitals with a foreign investment share of more than 50 percent or capital of more than $5 million in Jeju Province and eight free economic zones.

Park emphasized that the ministry will exercise its right to refuse such for-profit hospitals in other free economic zones when applications are made. The central government exercises final approval for the eight FEZs.

A for-profit hospital is a medical institution that combines foreign capital with domestic medical resources and provides comprehensive medical services to foreign patients.

"It is questionable that there is a need for investor-owned medical institutions as many local hospitals already provide world-class medical services to foreigners," Park said. He pointed out that even without a special hospital, 400,000 foreign nationals have come South Korea to receive treatment.

The Jeju provincial government said that the approval won't affect the nation's public medical service system, as the national health insurance won't be applied there.

The approval comes after 13 years of wrangling over the need for such a specialized hospital, which critics claim could eventually lead to a spike in medical costs for everyone. (Yonhap)