Doctors’ perception on the infringement of basic rights and the collapse of essential medical services following CCTV installation in the operating rooms
10.5124/jkma.2023.66.12.728
- Author:
Ji Yeun LIM
1
;
Sun Mi LIM
;
Kye-Hyun KIM
Author Information
1. Research Institute for Healthcare Policy, Korean Medical Association, Seoul, Korea
- Publication Type:Special Contribution
- From:Journal of the Korean Medical Association
2023;66(12):728-734
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
Background:On September 25, 2023, the law requiring the mandatory installation and operation of closed circuit television (CCTV) in the operating room went into effect. In this study, doctors’ perceptions of the law were re-examined on September 23, 2023 (just prior to the law’s enforcement), following a survey conducted on July 21, 2021 (before the re-examination of the bill). This study aimed to confirm doctors’ perceptions of the infringement of fundamental rights of this law, the collapse of essential medical services due to the avoidance of surgery, and other concerns and priority solutions ahead of the law’s enforcement.
Methods:The survey was conducted from 8 to 18 September, 2023, by the Korean Medical Association Doctor Survey; a total of 1,267 doctors responded to the survey.
Results:Out of 1,267 respondents, 1,156 (91.2%) said “yes,” and 111 (8.8%) said “no” to issue concerning constitutional violations of fundamental rights–such as the freedom of medical personnel to practice their profession–and moral rights. A total of 1,149 (90.7%) respondents agreed with the concern regarding the collapse of essential medical care due to the avoidance of surgeons.
Conclusion:Sufficient guidance should be provided, along with guidelines that provide explicit standards for the installation and operation of the CCTV systems, along with safety management measures. Medical disputes and the heavy legal responsibility of medical personnel are the main reasons as to why essential medical care collapses, given the avoidance of surgery. Medical disputes should be avoided in order to prevent essential medical care collapse, as the video is used as evidence for criminal sanctions.