Purpose: This opinion piece challenges the Ministry of Health and Welfare of Korea’s recent move to further expand medical school admission quotas. It argues that increasing admission numbers alone does not address the core constraints on physician workforce capacity. Drawing on unresolved lessons from the 2024 medical crisis, it urges policymakers to move beyond a narrow focus on quotas and instead prioritize strengthening educational infrastructure and pursuing meaningful systemic reform.Current concepts: Medical education must not become merely a tool for inflating workforce numbers. Producing competent physicians requires safe clinical learning environments, sufficient faculty for supervision and feedback, and deliberate cultivation of professionalism and ethics. Many medical schools already face declining instructional quality at current enrollment levels, with faculty stretched thin and students receiving inadequate clinical exposure. Crucially, imbalances in Korea’s healthcare system arise not from an overall physician shortage but from structural failings—particularly in essential fields such as emergency medicine, pediatrics, and obstetrics—where excessive workloads, inadequate compensation, and unstable working conditions persist.Discussion and conclusion: Expanding admission quotas without addressing structural flaws is a superficial remedy that may worsen workforce maldistribution and erode public trust in healthcare quality. Meaningful reform requires quality assurance in medical education; investments in care infrastructure and compensation; redesign of regional healthcare ecosystems; integrated national strategies linking education, training, and deployment; and restoration of social trust through transparency. Building an adequate physician workforce is a vital national goal, but it requires comprehensive, quality-driven reform rather than rapid numerical expansion.
Young Hwan Lee (Tue,) studied this question.