Overview
This draft is a cautious starting point for an IndiaWiki editorial entry on SRTR Medical College, Ambajogai. It is intended for internal review by human editors and is not ready for public publication. The subject, by virtue of its name and the cohort designation of "medical college", appears to be an institution of medical education situated in or associated with Ambajogai, a town in the Marathwada region of Maharashtra. Beyond this broad framing, no specific facts regarding the institution's founding date, governance, affiliations, intake capacity, faculty strength, infrastructure, or accreditation status are asserted here, since such details require verification from primary or reliable secondary sources before inclusion.
The purpose of this draft is to provide editors with a structured scaffold: a neutral overview, contextual background appropriate to medical colleges in India, a discussion of why such institutions are encyclopaedically significant, and detailed checklists of what to verify, what to include, and how to structure the final article. Editors are encouraged to replace placeholder language with referenced facts, remove or revise any sentence that cannot be independently verified, and to ensure that the final article complies with IndiaWiki's standards of neutrality, verifiability, and reliable sourcing.
Background
Medical colleges in India operate within a regulatory and educational framework that has evolved over several decades. They typically offer undergraduate programmes leading to the MBBS degree, and many also offer postgraduate degrees such as MD, MS, and various diploma or super-speciality qualifications. Institutions are generally affiliated to a university for academic purposes and are required to obtain recognition from the apex national medical regulator, which historically was the Medical Council of India and is at present the National Medical Commission. Government medical colleges are commonly attached to a teaching hospital that also serves as a referral centre for the surrounding districts.
Ambajogai is a town in the Beed district of Maharashtra, located in the Marathwada region. The region has a number of educational and health institutions that serve a largely rural catchment, and medical colleges in such towns often play a dual role of training medical professionals and providing tertiary or near-tertiary care to populations that would otherwise have to travel to larger urban centres. The exact administrative status, ownership, and affiliations of SRTR Medical College, Ambajogai should be confirmed by editors from official sources such as the institution's own publications, state government notifications, or the regulator's listings before being stated in the article.
Significance
Medical colleges in smaller towns and semi-urban regions of India are encyclopaedically significant for several reasons. They contribute to the supply of trained medical professionals in the country, often retaining graduates who serve in regional health systems. Their teaching hospitals frequently function as the principal referral facilities for a wide catchment, providing services that may not be readily available in private practice in the area. They are also nodes of public health activity, conducting outreach, immunisation drives, screening camps, and community medicine programmes in collaboration with the state government.
For an institution such as SRTR Medical College, Ambajogai, significance for an encyclopaedic article rests on documenting its role within the medical education landscape of Maharashtra, its contribution to healthcare delivery in the Marathwada region, and any notable academic, research, or service activities that can be verified. Editors should be careful to distinguish between general statements about the role of medical colleges, which may be made in neutral terms, and specific claims about this institution, which require sourcing. Significance should be demonstrated through cited coverage rather than asserted through superlatives.
Common topics for editors to verify
The following list identifies areas that are typically covered in articles about medical colleges and that editors should verify from reliable sources before including in the final article. None of these items should be assumed; each requires a citation.
- Full official name of the institution and the meaning of the abbreviation "SRTR", including whether it refers to a person, trust, or society after whom the college is named.
- Year of establishment and the historical circumstances of its founding, including any predecessor institutions.
- Ownership and governance: whether it is a state government college, an aided institution, a private college, or run by a trust or society.
- University affiliation for academic purposes, and recognition status with the National Medical Commission or any earlier regulator.
- Programmes offered, including undergraduate, postgraduate, super-speciality, paramedical, and nursing courses, with sanctioned intake.
- Associated teaching hospital, including bed strength, departments, and any specialised units, verified from official sources.
- Campus location, layout, and facilities such as libraries, hostels, laboratories, and auditoria.
- Admission process, including the entrance examinations through which students are admitted at undergraduate and postgraduate levels.
- Notable alumni, faculty, or administrators, with each entry independently sourced.
- Research output, collaborations, and any centres of excellence formally designated by government or academic bodies.
- Outreach, rural health, and community medicine activities, including any rural health training centres.
- Awards, recognitions, or rankings, where these come from credible and clearly identified bodies.
- Controversies, inspections, or regulatory actions, which should only be included with high-quality sourcing and balanced phrasing.
Editors are reminded that figures such as student intake, fees, and bed counts can change over time, and any such number included in the article should be accompanied by the date or academic year to which it refers, along with a citation.
Suggested structure for the final article
Once verified information is gathered, the article may be organised along the following lines, adjusted to the depth of available sourcing:
- Lead section: a concise summary identifying the institution, its location, type, and principal academic offerings.
- History: founding, key milestones, expansions, and changes in governance or affiliation, written chronologically.
- Campus and infrastructure: location, buildings, hostels, library, laboratories, and other facilities.
- Academics: programmes offered, departments, intake, admission procedure, and curriculum structure in general terms.
- Affiliated hospital: description of the teaching hospital, its departments, services, and role in regional healthcare.
- Research and publications: significant research areas, collaborations, and notable publications, if reliably documented.
- Student life: associations, cultural and academic festivals, sports, and other extracurricular activities.
- Notable people: alumni and faculty meeting notability standards, each individually sourced.
- See also, References, and External links.
Each section should be proportionate to the quantity and quality of available sources. Sections for which reliable information is unavailable may be omitted rather than padded with speculative content.
Editorial notes
This draft deliberately refrains from stating specific facts that cannot be confirmed from the title and cohort alone. Editors taking this draft forward should:
- Consult primary sources such as the institution's official website, prospectus, and annual reports, while remembering that primary sources should be supplemented by independent secondary coverage.
- Use reputable secondary sources, including state government publications, regulator listings, and established news organisations, to corroborate claims.
- Avoid promotional language, peacock terms, and unverified superlatives.
- Attribute opinions and contested claims rather than presenting them as fact.
- Update or remove time-sensitive information, and clearly date any statistics included.
- Ensure that biographical mentions of individuals comply with IndiaWiki's policies on living persons.
If, after a thorough search, only limited reliable information is available, the article should remain a short, well-sourced stub rather than be expanded with unverifiable detail. The objective is an accurate, neutral, and verifiable entry, even at the cost of brevity.
References
References are to be added by editors during the verification and rewriting stage. Suggested categories of sources include: official publications of the institution; notifications and listings issued by the Government of Maharashtra and the Directorate of Medical Education and Research; records maintained by the National Medical Commission; the affiliating university's official documents; and independent reporting in established Indian news organisations. Each factual claim retained in the final article should be accompanied by an inline citation to a source that meets IndiaWiki's reliability standards.