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This draft pertains to the proposed IndiaWiki entry on the Autonomous State Medical College, Ayodhya, an institution understood to fall within the broader cohort of autonomous state medical colleges established by state governments in India to expand undergraduate and, in some cases, postgraduate medical education. As with other entries in this cohort, the article should describe the institution's mandate, governance arrangements, academic offerings, and the teaching hospital or affiliated hospital infrastructure attached to it, while remaining strictly neutral and source-led. Editors should treat this draft as a scaffold rather than a finished article: specific facts such as the year of establishment, the regulatory approvals received, the intake capacity of the MBBS programme, faculty strength, and the precise administrative status (society, trust, or autonomous body under a state Act) must be confirmed against primary and secondary sources before being inserted. Until such verification is complete, the article should describe the institution in general terms applicable to autonomous state medical colleges, flagging unverified specifics for editorial attention. The Overview section in the final article should ideally provide a concise, encyclopaedic summary of what the institution is, where it is located, and what it does, without venturing into promotional language or contested details.
Autonomous state medical colleges in India have generally emerged as part of state and central government efforts to widen access to medical education, particularly in districts that previously lacked a tertiary teaching hospital. Many such colleges have been established under schemes that involve the upgradation of an existing district hospital into a teaching facility, with academic governance vested in an autonomous society or registered body. Editors drafting the Background section for the Autonomous State Medical College, Ayodhya should situate the institution within this broader policy context, noting the general framework of approvals required from the National Medical Commission (and, historically, the Medical Council of India) and the role of the state government in funding and oversight. Ayodhya, as a district headquarters in Uttar Pradesh, has its own civic, administrative, and historical context, which may be referred to neutrally to explain why a state medical college could be located there. However, editors should not assume specific dates, foundation stones, ministerial inaugurations, or named officials without sources. Where the institution's exact origin story is unclear, the article should use cautious phrasing such as "reported to have been established" or "described in state government communications as", with appropriate citations.
The significance of an institution such as the Autonomous State Medical College, Ayodhya, can be addressed along several neutral lines: its role in expanding undergraduate medical seats in Uttar Pradesh; its function as a tertiary referral and teaching hospital for the surrounding region; and its place within the wider network of autonomous state medical colleges that have been set up across India over recent years. Editors are encouraged to discuss the institution's significance in measured, encyclopaedic terms, avoiding superlatives or claims of being "the first", "the largest", or "the best" unless these are clearly supported by reliable sources. Significance may also be discussed in terms of public health access, training of medical professionals, and the integration of clinical services with academic activity. Where Ayodhya's wider cultural and pilgrimage profile is mentioned, it should be done only insofar as it bears on the institution's catchment population or healthcare demand, and not in a manner that conflates the medical college with unrelated civic or religious developments. The aim is to give readers a calibrated sense of why the institution merits an encyclopaedia entry, without overstating its prominence.
The following items are routinely expected in entries on medical colleges and should be verified from authoritative sources, such as the National Medical Commission's official lists, the institution's own publications, Government of Uttar Pradesh notifications, and reputable news reports, before inclusion:
Editors should be especially cautious about controversies, allegations, ranking claims, or quoted statements attributed to officials. Such material should not be inserted on the basis of social media posts or unverified forwards. Where an item cannot be verified, it is preferable to omit it rather than to include speculative content.
A balanced final article on the Autonomous State Medical College, Ayodhya, could follow a structure similar to other IndiaWiki entries on medical colleges, adjusted to the available verified information. A workable outline is:
Each section should be kept proportionate, and editors should resist the temptation to fill gaps with generic descriptions copied from unrelated colleges.
This draft has been deliberately written without specific dates, names, numbers, or rankings, because such details cannot be responsibly supplied from the title and cohort alone. Reviewers are requested to:
Once verified content is added, this scaffolding text should be substantially rewritten or removed, so that the final published article reads as a coherent encyclopaedia entry rather than as an editor-facing document.
References are to be supplied by reviewing editors. Suggested categories of sources include: official notifications of the Government of Uttar Pradesh relating to the establishment and functioning of the college; lists and orders published by the National Medical Commission; the official website and prospectus of the institution; the website of the affiliating university; and reports in established Indian newspapers and news agencies. Each citation should include the publication, date of publication, and, where applicable, a stable URL. Primary documents should be preferred for legal and administrative facts, and independent secondary sources for evaluative or contextual statements. Until such references are added, no contested or specific factual claim should appear in the live article.