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AIIMS Rajkot

Overview

This draft concerns AIIMS Rajkot, an entry that falls within the cohort of medical colleges in India. The All India Institutes of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) are a group of autonomous public medical institutions of higher education established by the Government of India. AIIMS Rajkot is generally understood to be one of the newer institutes within this network, situated in the state of Gujarat. Because the present draft is intended only as a starting point for editorial review, specific factual details such as the date of foundation, leadership, intake capacity, campus area, affiliations, ranking and operational status of various departments have been deliberately left to be verified by editors against authoritative primary and secondary sources before publication.

The purpose of this fragment is to give editors a structured base on which to build a fuller, well-sourced article. It includes a neutral framing of the subject, a checklist of items most commonly required in encyclopaedic entries on Indian medical colleges, and suggested section headings. Editors are encouraged to remove or rewrite any wording here that, after verification, proves to be inaccurate, outdated or insufficiently sourced. Nothing in this draft should be treated as confirmed fact unless an inline citation to a reliable, independent source is added.

Background

The AIIMS network was conceived to expand access to tertiary healthcare, medical education and research across India. Successive central government schemes have authorised the establishment of additional AIIMS campuses in different states, with the stated objectives of correcting regional imbalances in specialist care, increasing the number of postgraduate training seats and supporting biomedical research in underserved regions. AIIMS Rajkot is commonly described in this broader context as part of the expansion of the network into Gujarat.

Editors should establish, with citations, the precise scheme or notification under which AIIMS Rajkot was sanctioned, the year in which it was approved, the year in which academic sessions or clinical services commenced, and the agencies responsible for its construction and commissioning. The relationship of the institute to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, to the AIIMS apex network, and to relevant state-level health and education departments should also be clarified. Background paragraphs in the final article may briefly summarise national policy on medical education expansion, but care should be taken not to attribute to AIIMS Rajkot any specific policy outcome, milestone or comparative claim that has not been confirmed in a reliable independent source.

Significance

As a public sector medical institute, AIIMS Rajkot is significant for several overlapping reasons that editors may wish to develop in measured language. First, it forms part of the central government's effort to expand specialised tertiary care beyond metropolitan centres, particularly into regions of western India. Second, it contributes to the pool of undergraduate (MBBS) and postgraduate medical seats available through national entrance examinations, although the exact intake should be confirmed before being stated. Third, it is intended to serve as a referral and research centre, potentially relieving pressure on existing tertiary facilities in Gujarat and neighbouring states.

The article should treat the institute's significance descriptively rather than promotionally. Phrases that imply leadership, ranking or comparative excellence should be avoided unless supported by independent evaluations such as the National Institutional Ranking Framework or peer-reviewed analyses. Where editors wish to indicate the institute's role in the local healthcare ecosystem, they should rely on documented patient-load figures, departmental notifications or official press releases, and should attribute claims clearly. Speculative statements about future significance, such as projected expansion, additional super-speciality blocks or research output, are best left out unless explicitly announced by competent authorities.

Common topics for editors to verify

The following checklist identifies items that are typically expected in an encyclopaedic entry on an Indian medical college and that should be confirmed before inclusion in the published article on AIIMS Rajkot:

  • Official name, any alternative names, and the correct expansion of the acronym.
  • Year of approval by the Union Cabinet or relevant authority, and the scheme under which it was sanctioned.
  • Year of foundation stone laying, year of commencement of academic sessions, and year of commencement of outpatient and inpatient services.
  • Location, including precise address, taluka, district and any campus sub-locations such as a temporary or transit campus, if applicable.
  • Total land area, built-up area, and details of any phased construction.
  • Names and tenures of Presidents of the Institute Body, Directors and Deans, with sources for each appointment.
  • Affiliating and regulatory bodies, including the National Medical Commission and the AIIMS apex framework.
  • Undergraduate and postgraduate programmes offered, intake capacity for each, and admission routes such as NEET-UG and INI-CET.
  • List of clinical, pre-clinical and para-clinical departments that are operational, as distinct from those that are merely planned.
  • Hospital bed strength, number of operation theatres, intensive care facilities and specialised units, with dates of commissioning.
  • Research centres, central laboratories, and any collaborations with Indian or foreign institutions.
  • Notable healthcare initiatives, outreach programmes and rural health linkages.
  • Awards, accreditations and rankings, with the year and the awarding body.
  • Any controversies, audits or official inquiries, presented neutrally and only when reliably reported.
  • Official website, social media handles and contact information.

Each entry on this checklist should be supported by a citation to a primary government source, a reputable news organisation or a peer-reviewed publication. Editors should be especially careful with figures that change frequently, such as bed strength and intake.

Suggested structure for the final article

For consistency with other IndiaWiki entries on medical colleges, editors may consider the following section structure once verified information has been collected:

  1. Lead section: a concise summary of the institute's identity, location and status, written after the body of the article is finalised.
  2. History: sanction, foundation, phased commissioning and major institutional milestones in chronological order.
  3. Campus: location, layout, residential and academic blocks, and any sustainability or accessibility features.
  4. Organisation and governance: reporting structure, Institute Body, Governing Body, Director and key administrative officers.
  5. Academics: undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral programmes, with admissions and curriculum overview.
  6. Hospital and clinical services: departments, super-speciality units, emergency services and patient services.
  7. Research: thrust areas, centres, funded projects and notable publications, written without promotional language.
  8. Outreach and community engagement: rural health programmes, camps and partnerships with state health authorities.
  9. Affiliations and accreditations: regulatory recognitions and external assessments.
  10. See also, References and External links.

This structure can be adjusted to fit the volume of verified information available. Sections for which no reliable detail can be sourced should be omitted rather than padded.

Editorial notes

Reviewers should treat this draft as scaffolding and not as a near-final article. Several caveats apply. First, no specific dates, names of office-holders, intake numbers, bed counts, ranking positions, fee structures, awards or controversies have been included, because such details cannot be responsibly stated without verification. Editors must add these only with inline citations. Second, the tone throughout has been kept descriptive and neutral; promotional adjectives such as "premier", "world-class" or "leading" should not be introduced unless they appear in attributed quotations from reliable sources. Third, care should be taken to distinguish between facilities and programmes that are operational, those that are under construction, and those that are merely announced; conflating these categories is a common source of inaccuracy in articles on newer AIIMS institutes.

Finally, where information is genuinely unavailable in the public domain, it is preferable to leave a section short or to omit it altogether rather than to fill it with generic statements. The draft should be read alongside IndiaWiki's policies on verifiability, neutral point of view and reliable sourcing before being moved to the main namespace.

References

References to be supplied by editors. Suggested categories of sources include: official notifications and press releases of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India; the official website of AIIMS Rajkot; gazette notifications relating to the AIIMS network; reports by the National Medical Commission; coverage by established Indian news organisations; and peer-reviewed publications affiliated to the institute. Each factual statement in the final article should be paired with at least one such citation, and contested or sensitive claims should be supported by multiple independent sources.