-
Main menu
- Sign in
This draft is a cautious starting point for an IndiaWiki article on Government Medical College, Gonda, an institution belonging to the broader cohort of government medical colleges in India. The draft has been prepared without access to verified primary sources specific to this college, and it deliberately avoids stating dates of establishment, intake capacity, affiliating university, names of office bearers, hospital bed strength, ranking positions, recognition status, or any other particulars that require sourcing. Editors picking up this draft should treat every concrete claim as something to be added only after consulting authoritative references such as official notifications of the Government of Uttar Pradesh, the National Medical Commission (NMC), the affiliating health university, and the institution's own published material.
Government Medical College, Gonda is understood, by virtue of its name, to be a government-run medical institution located in the Gonda district of Uttar Pradesh. The cohort designation "medical_college" indicates that the article should follow the structural conventions used for similar Indian medical colleges on IndiaWiki, including sections on history, academics, affiliations, infrastructure, the attached teaching hospital, admission procedures, student life, and notable developments. The current document provides scaffolding, context, and review prompts rather than asserted facts.
Government medical colleges in India are typically established by state governments, often with financial or scheme-based support from the Union Government, to expand access to undergraduate and postgraduate medical education and to strengthen tertiary healthcare delivery in underserved districts. Several such colleges have been set up under centrally sponsored schemes intended to upgrade district hospitals into teaching institutions. Whether Government Medical College, Gonda was established under such a scheme, and the precise administrative pathway of its creation, is a matter that editors must verify from official orders before any specific claim is included in the article.
The district of Gonda lies in the Devipatan division of Uttar Pradesh and has historically been served by a district hospital and a network of community and primary health centres. The introduction of a medical college in such a district usually involves the integration of an existing hospital with new academic infrastructure, the recruitment of faculty across pre-clinical, para-clinical, and clinical departments, and inspections by the regulatory authority for permission to admit students. Editors should confirm the specific institutional arrangements, the affiliating university, and the regulatory recognitions applicable to Government Medical College, Gonda before describing them.
A government medical college, when established in a district such as Gonda, can have significance along several dimensions: educational, clinical, and socio-economic. Educationally, it adds seats to the pool of MBBS and potentially postgraduate places available within the state, contributing to the wider national effort to increase the doctor-to-population ratio. Clinically, the attached teaching hospital generally serves as a referral centre for surrounding districts, offering specialist services that may not have been available locally before. Socio-economically, such institutions can influence local employment, ancillary healthcare services, and the development of allied health education.
The extent to which Government Medical College, Gonda fulfils each of these roles is an empirical question that depends on its current capacity, faculty strength, infrastructure, and patient load. Editors should resist the temptation to generalise from the cohort to this specific institution. Instead, the significance section in the final article should rely on documented data such as official annual reports, state health department releases, and credible journalistic coverage. Until such material is gathered and cited, the significance of the college should be described in cautious, qualified terms.
The following checklist sets out areas where editors should gather and cite reliable sources before inserting specific facts into the article. None of these items should be filled in from memory or assumption.
The completed IndiaWiki article on Government Medical College, Gonda should follow a structure broadly consistent with other entries in the medical college cohort. A workable outline is suggested below, to be adapted as sourced material becomes available.
Editors should approach this draft as scaffolding rather than as content ready for publication. Every factual statement added during revision should be supported by a citation to a reliable source, preferably an official one. Where sources differ, the article should reflect the disagreement rather than choose silently between them. Promotional language, superlatives, and unattributed praise should be removed; equally, unverified criticism or rumour must not be inserted.
Particular care is needed regarding figures such as bed strength, MBBS intake, faculty numbers, and fees, all of which change over time and are frequently misreported online. Names of current office bearers should be checked against recent notifications because such positions rotate. Any claim about ranking, accreditation, or awards must cite the awarding body directly. Photographs, if added, should comply with IndiaWiki's image policy and licensing requirements. Finally, the tone throughout should remain encyclopaedic, neutral, and verifiable, in keeping with IndiaWiki's editorial standards for institutional articles.
No references have been cited in this draft because no specific factual claims have been asserted. Before publication, editors should add citations to: the relevant Government of Uttar Pradesh notifications and orders concerning the college; National Medical Commission lists and letters of permission; the official website of the college and its affiliating university; reports by reputable Indian newspapers and news agencies; and, where appropriate, peer-reviewed academic literature on medical education in India. Each statement of fact in the final article should be tied to one or more of these sources.