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Government Medical College, Mahasamund

Overview

This draft is a preliminary, editor-facing scaffold for an IndiaWiki entry on Government Medical College, Mahasamund, an institution that, by the indication of its name, appears to be a state-run medical education establishment located in or associated with the Mahasamund district of Chhattisgarh. The present document is intentionally cautious: it has been prepared without recourse to specific dates, named office-bearers, infrastructure metrics, intake figures, fee structures, examination outcomes, rankings, affiliations or controversies, all of which must be added only after consultation with reliable, citable sources. Editors are requested to treat every paragraph below as a starting frame rather than as verified prose. Where sentences appear to make a claim, that claim is restricted to what can be inferred from the institution's name and cohort designation as a medical college, and nothing more. The purpose of this draft is to provide a structural and contextual base on which a properly sourced encyclopaedic article can be built, rather than to publish information that has not been independently confirmed. Readers of this draft within the editorial workflow should expect to rewrite, expand, prune and cite each section before any version is moved towards publication review.

Background

Government medical colleges in India are typically established by state governments to expand access to undergraduate and, in many cases, postgraduate medical education, while simultaneously functioning as tertiary care providers through an attached teaching hospital. They generally operate within a regulatory framework that includes the National Medical Commission and, where applicable, the relevant state health university to which the college is affiliated for academic recognition and the conduct of examinations. The administrative ownership usually rests with the state department of medical education or a similarly designated body, and admissions to undergraduate seats are commonly routed through the national entrance examination process and the centralised counselling mechanisms operated at the state and national levels. Within this broader landscape, an institution titled Government Medical College, Mahasamund would, on the face of it, fit the pattern of state-run colleges intended to strengthen medical training and healthcare delivery in regions outside the larger metropolitan centres. However, the specific founding circumstances, the year of commencement of academic activity, the parent university, the nature of the attached hospital, and the present scale of operations at this particular institution have not been independently verified for this draft and must be confirmed by editors before inclusion.

Significance

Medical colleges established in district headquarters or comparable locations across Indian states are often considered significant for two reasons that may, in principle, be relevant here. First, they expand the pool of trained medical graduates within the country and frequently encourage retention of healthcare workforce in regions that have historically experienced shortages of specialist services. Second, the teaching hospital associated with such a college can become a referral centre for the surrounding catchment area, providing diagnostic and treatment services that might otherwise require patients to travel longer distances. If Government Medical College, Mahasamund operates along these lines, it could plausibly play a comparable role within its region. That said, the actual scope, capacity, departments offered, outreach programmes, community health activities and any research output of the institution have not been confirmed in this draft. Editors should therefore frame the significance section around verified achievements and documented activities, taking care not to attribute generalised benefits of medical colleges as a category to this specific institution unless reliable sources support such attribution. The encyclopaedic tone should remain measured and avoid promotional language.

Common topics for editors to verify

The following checklist is offered as guidance for the editorial team and must be worked through using primary and reputable secondary sources before any factual statement is introduced into the published article:

  • Official name, including any alternative spellings, abbreviations or local-language renderings, and the precise location with administrative address.
  • Year of establishment, the government order or notification by which the college was founded, and the year in which the first batch of students was admitted.
  • The university or statutory body to which the college is academically affiliated, along with the recognition status granted by the National Medical Commission or its predecessor authority for each course offered.
  • List of undergraduate, postgraduate and any super-speciality or diploma courses, together with the sanctioned annual intake for each programme as per the most recent official notifications.
  • Details of the attached teaching hospital, including the number of sanctioned beds, departments, outpatient and inpatient services, and any specialised units.
  • Names and tenures of the dean or principal and other senior administrative office-bearers, ensuring that only currently verifiable holders are listed and historical entries are dated.
  • Admission process, including the entrance examination accepted, counselling authority, reservation framework as applicable in the state, and any institutional quotas.
  • Campus facilities such as lecture theatres, laboratories, library, hostels, sports infrastructure, and residential quarters, supported by official descriptions where possible.
  • Faculty strength, departmental composition and any notable academic, research or clinical activities reported in reliable sources.
  • Affiliations with state or central health schemes, participation in district health programmes, and any memoranda of understanding with other institutions.
  • Awards, accreditations, inspection outcomes and any documented controversies, each cited to a credible source and presented in neutral language.

Editors should refrain from filling these fields from social media posts, unverified blogs or coaching-industry websites.

Suggested structure for the final article

For consistency with other IndiaWiki entries in the medical college cohort, the final article may be organised along the following lines, subject to availability of sourced material:

  1. Lead section summarising the institution in two to four sentences, giving location, type, affiliation and principal courses, with citations.
  2. History, covering establishment, key milestones, expansion of courses and any restructuring, supported by government notifications and reputable news coverage.
  3. Campus and infrastructure, describing the physical premises, academic blocks, hospital wings and student amenities.
  4. Academics, with subsections on undergraduate programmes, postgraduate programmes, departments, and academic calendar features, drawing on the affiliating university's prospectus and the college's official communications.
  5. Admissions, outlining the entrance routes, counselling pathways and reservation policy applicable.
  6. Hospital and clinical services, detailing the attached hospital's role, departments and any community outreach.
  7. Research and publications, only where verifiable.
  8. Student life, including associations, cultural and sporting activities, and annual events, if documented.
  9. Notable people, restricted to individuals meeting IndiaWiki notability criteria.
  10. See also, References and External links.

Each section should be written in neutral, encyclopaedic Indian English, with inline citations and without marketing language.

Editorial notes

Reviewers are reminded that this draft has been generated as a structural placeholder and does not itself constitute a verified source. No date, name, number or claim presented above should be carried forward into a published version without independent confirmation from authoritative materials such as official state government orders, the National Medical Commission's published lists, the affiliating university's records, the institution's official website, and reportage in established news organisations. Particular caution is advised in three areas that frequently attract inaccurate content in articles about medical colleges: first, founding year and recognition history, where confusion between the year of sanction, year of first admission and year of first NMC recognition is common; second, course intake figures, which change from year to year and must be tied to a specific academic session; and third, leadership listings, which become outdated quickly and should be either omitted or clearly dated. Editors are encouraged to mark unresolved points with hidden comments rather than speculative prose, and to escalate any contested claim to the cohort coordinator before publication.

References

To be supplied by editors. Suggested categories of sources to consult include: the official website of the institution; notifications and orders issued by the Government of Chhattisgarh, Department of Medical Education; the National Medical Commission's college and course recognition lists; the prospectus and academic regulations of the affiliating health sciences university; the relevant state counselling authority's information bulletins; and reportage from established Indian newspapers and news agencies. Each reference must be cited inline at the point of use, with publication date and access date where the source is online.