Government Medical College, Anantapur

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Government Medical College, Anantapuram
GMC ATP Front Gate
Other name
GMC ATP
Former name
Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Medical Science, Anantapur
TypeMedical Education
Established1981
Academic affiliations
Dr. YSR University of Health Sciences
Undergraduates150 MBBS seats
Postgraduates13 PG Courses
Location, ,
CampusMultiple Sites
Websitehttps://www.gmc-atp.in

Government Medical College is a medical institute located in Anantapur, Andhra Pradesh, India.[1] It is affiliated to Dr YSR University of Health Sciences. A Government General Hospital is attached to the medical college.[2] The college and hospital are approved and recognised by the Medical Council of India. The first batch of 100 medical undergraduate students started in 2000.

Currently Batch of 150 UG-MBBS students has started from academic year 2019-20 onwards.

Government Medical College, Anantapuram also offers 13 Medical Post Graduate Courses :

Type PG Course
MD Social & Preventive Medicine / Community Medicine
MD Bio-Chemistry
MD Psychiatry
MD Pathology
MD Paediatrics
MD Anaesthesiology
MD Forensic Medicine/Forensic Medicine & Toxicology
MD General Medicine
MD Microbiology
MD Pharmacology
MS Orthopaedics
MS General Surgery
MD/MS Obstetrics & Gynaecology

For More Information : https://mbbscouncil.com/listing/government-medical-college-ananthapuram/

Academics[edit]

The main undergraduate course offered at the college is an MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) course. The qualification for undergraduate courses is 10+2 or equivalent education with Biology, physics and chemistry as main subjects. Depending on the rank obtained in the common entrance test [NEET], the N.T.R. University of Health Sciences fills the seats in all the medical, dental, ayurvedic and homeopathy colleges in the state of Andhra pradesh.

Incharge Principal[edit]

Dr.Neeraja, Professor of Pathology

References[edit]

  1. ^ "AP to lose 270 medical seats this year too". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012.
  2. ^ Reporter, Our Staff (10 June 2004). "Health services paralysed". The Hindu. p. 03. Archived from the original on 1 January 2005 – via The Hindu (old).