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Originally built as Tamil Nadu legislative assembly and secretariat complex in 2010 to house the assembly hall, secretariat and offices of the chief minister and cabinet ministers, [1] the complex was later converted into a super-speciality hospital. It was built in 1.93 million sq ft. at a total cost of ₹ 4,250 million in 2010.
The Kalaignar Centenary Super Specialty Hospital was a proposed 500-bed multi-super specialty hospital in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India. [5] It was planned to be constructed on the King Institute campus in Guindy. Announced by the Tamil Nadu government on June 3, 2021, the hospital was to be established at a cost of ₹250 crore. [5]
This is a list of medical colleges controlled by the government of Tamil Nadu in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. All colleges are funded and run by government of Tamil Nadu.There are 46 medical colleges in the state. All of these colleges listed below are affiliated with The Tamil Nadu Dr. M.G.R. Medical University.
The college is attached to a 510-bedded Multi-Speciality Hospital which was built in 2016. [1] During the Covid pandemic, the hospital was the first referral centre for Coimbatore and neighboring districts and was the chief covid treatment centre that treated patients following which the number of beds were increased to 1000.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Government multi-super speciality hospital, Chennai
The college is affiliated to the Tamil Nadu Dr. MGR Medical University. The college and the hospital are funded and managed by the Government of Tamil Nadu. The College has also received PMSSY funding from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare of the Central Government of India for setting up Super specialty Hospital in the campus.
Srinivas Sanjivi, a senior official with the Madras Medical Service, resigned from the government service in 1958 and with the assistance of some of the prominent social leaders in Chennai such as Kasturi Srinivasan, T. R. Venkatarama Sastri, M. Bhaktavatsalam, and M. A. Chidambaram, he registered a charitable trust under the name, Voluntary Health Services, in July [1] for serving the ...
The college emerged from the 1 April 2012 transfer of the 440-bed Tiruvannamalai Government District Headquarters Hospital (which had started as a government Taluk hospital in 1950) to the Department of Medical Education who then relaunched it as a teaching hospital offering 100 undergraduate places, the first of whom commenced studies in the ...