Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Guru Gobind Singh Medical College is a public medical college located in Faridkot, Punjab, India. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Giani Zail Singh , president of India (1982–1987) was one of the few people involved in bringing the medical college to the Faridkot city, when he was the Chief minister of Punjab in 1972–1977.
Government Medical College, Amritsar; Guru Gobind Singh Medical College, ... Sri Sukhmani Dental College and Hospital, ... University College Of Nursing, Faridkot;
The college's original name Glancy Medical College was named after the former Governor General of Punjab and was renamed to its current name after independence. The college is governed by Director Research and Medical Education, Punjab and is affiliated to Baba Farid University of Health Sciences, Faridkot.
The Amrita Schools of Medicine have a number of outreach programs that provide medical care to underserved communities. They have provided medical care to over 10 million people through their outreach programs. The schools have also trained over 10,000 doctors and nurses through their rural health programs. [14] [15]
Initially, started in 1988, in the Vazirabad area of Nanded attached to the Guru Gobind Singhji Memorial civil hospital the hospital has grown into a much bigger hospital in an area of 115 acres campus after its shift to the vishnupuri area in the outskirts of the city offering a huge scope for expansion in future. It also has AC classrooms and ...
Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee Government Medical College, Faridabad, established in 2022, is a full-fledged tertiary Government Medical college and hospital. This college is located at Faridabad in Haryana. The college imparts the degree of Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery (MBBS). The college is recognized by National Medical Commission and is ...
It is attached with the famous Safdarjang Hospital for clinical teaching. [2] The college runs under the umbrella of Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University. Vardhman Mahavir Medical College was established at Safdarjung Hospital (one of the largest hospitals in India, started during the Second World War) in November 2001. [3]
The first group of students admitted to the Grant Medical College, Bombay, on 1 November 1845 were: Grant Medical College in the Illustrated London News, 8 October 1859, print from a photograph by H. Hinton. Free: Bhau Daji Parsekar, Monoel A.D. Carvalho, Sebestian A.D. Carvalho