Gandhi Medical College
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gandhi Medical College, founded 14 September 1954, is a medical college in Padmarao Nagar, Secunderabad in the state of Andhra Pradesh, India.
Academics
Courses offered by the institute include:
Admissions
Admissions are based on scores on the EAMCET (Engineering, Agricultural and Medical Common Entrance Test). Admissions are conducted by the NTR University of Health Sciences.
History
Gandhi Medical College, originally name People's Medical College, was founded 14 September, 1954. It was located at Humayun nagar close to the present-day Sarojini Devi eye hospital. It was founded because the original medical college in the area, Osmania Medical College, was unable to keep up with admissions for medical students.On 25 June, 1955, the college was inaugurated by the first president of India, Dr. Rajendra Prasad.By 1956, the college was in financial trouble, and the government of Hyderabad agreed to take over the college and develop it. In 1958, the college was moved to Basheer bagh. The old building has since been demolished. In 2003, the college was moved again to Musheerabad in a process that had been ongoing since 1987.The teaching hospital for the college began as an infirmary in 1851. Developed with funds from philanthropists, the hospital was named KEM Hospital in honor of King Edward VII. The hospital was renamed Gandhi Hospital in 1958 to serve as the teaching hospital for the college. Nearly all the heads of units were British trained.The hospital performs about 80,000 outpatient consultations and 42,000 inpatient admissions yearly. 11,000 major and about 15,000 minor operations are also performed. The hospital is divided into 27 departments:
Next Page
This article is based on an article from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and is available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
In the Wikipedia there is a list with all authors of this article available.