-
Main menu
- Sign in
This draft is a preparatory scaffold for an IndiaWiki article on Tezpur Medical College, an institution that, by virtue of its name, falls within the cohort of medical colleges in India. The draft is intended strictly for internal editorial review and rewriting; it is not suitable for public publication in its present form. Editors are requested to treat every passage below as provisional context, to be replaced with verified facts drawn from reliable secondary sources before any version of this article is moved into the live encyclopaedia space.
The objective of this scaffold is to provide a usable structural starting point: section headings, neutral background framing, and a checklist of items that typically appear in articles about Indian medical colleges. It deliberately avoids stating specific dates of establishment, geographic addresses, names of administrators, affiliations, intake capacities, examination ranks, fee structures, infrastructure details, hospital bed strength, recognition status, or any allegations or controversies, because these particulars cannot be responsibly inferred from the title alone. Where a fact would normally be expected, this draft inserts a placeholder description of the kind of information editors should look for, together with guidance on the type of source that would be appropriate for verification.
Medical colleges in India are typically established either by the Union Government, a State Government, a public university, a trust or society, or a private body, and they generally operate under the regulatory framework prescribed for medical education in the country. Their core functions include the training of undergraduate medical students for the MBBS degree, the training of postgraduate students in clinical and pre-clinical specialities, and, in many cases, the operation of an attached teaching hospital that serves as a tertiary or secondary care facility for the surrounding region.
An institution bearing the name Tezpur Medical College would, by its nomenclature, suggest a geographic association with the town of Tezpur. However, editors must independently verify the precise location, the sponsoring authority, the year of commencement of academic activity, the university to which the college is affiliated, and the regulatory body under which it has obtained recognition or permission. Such verification should not be attempted from this draft, as no specific factual claims about these matters are made here. Background paragraphs in the final article should describe the institutional category, sponsoring authority, and the broader medical-education context only after each element has been independently confirmed through reliable, citeable sources.
Articles about medical colleges in India typically describe the institution's role in three overlapping domains: medical education, healthcare delivery through the attached hospital, and, where applicable, research and outreach. The significance section of the final article should therefore situate the college within these domains in a measured, descriptive manner, avoiding promotional language and unverified superlatives. Editors should resist phrasing such as "premier", "leading", or "renowned" unless such characterisations can be attributed to a reliable independent source.
If the institution serves a region where access to tertiary healthcare has historically been limited, the significance section may neutrally describe its potential role in expanding such access, but only with citation to government documents, peer-reviewed literature, or established news reporting. Similarly, any claim regarding the institution's contribution to the medical workforce of a particular state or region should be supported by published figures rather than estimation. The significance section should remain proportionate to what reliable sources actually say, and should not be expanded beyond what the available evidence supports. In the absence of such evidence, a brief, neutral paragraph is preferable to an elaborate but unsupported one.
The following checklist identifies the categories of information that editors should seek to verify from reliable secondary sources before inserting them into the final article. Each item is offered as a prompt for verification rather than as a statement of fact.
For each of the above, editors should prefer official government notifications, regulatory body publications, peer-reviewed literature, and established news outlets. Self-published institutional material may be used cautiously for uncontroversial descriptive details.
Once verification is complete, the final article may be organised along the following lines, adjusted to reflect the depth of available reliable sourcing:
The lead should be written last, after the body has been finalised, so that it accurately summarises the verified content. Each section should be proportionate to the volume of reliable information available; padding sections with unsourced material should be avoided.
This scaffold has been generated for editor use only and is not to be transferred to the public namespace without substantial rewriting. In particular, editors should note the following cautions:
Editors are encouraged to flag any section they cannot adequately verify and to leave maintenance tags rather than speculative prose.
References are to be added by editors during the rewriting process. Suggested categories of source material include: official notifications and gazettes issued by the relevant government authority; publications of the national medical regulatory body; the affiliating university's records and prospectuses; reports by recognised accreditation or assessment bodies; peer-reviewed scholarly literature on medical education in the relevant region; and reporting by established Indian newspapers and news agencies. Self-published institutional websites may be cited sparingly for uncontroversial descriptive details, with care taken not to rely on them for claims of distinction, ranking, or comparative excellence. Each citation should follow IndiaWiki's standard referencing format, including author, title, publisher, date, and access date where applicable.