Sunday 26 January 2014

Admit Card for RUHS Pre-PG Medical/Dental Entrance Exam 2014

Pre P.G.Admit Card Download url

Control Room for Pre P.G.-2014

Rajasthan University of Health Sciences RUHS has released admit cards for online Pre-PG Medical/Dental Entrance Examination 2014. Candidates who applied to Rajasthan Pre-PG Medical/Dental Entrance Examination 2014 can download their admit card from 25-01-2014 available at www.ruhsraj.org. Candidates may contact helpline number 0141-2795527 for any grievance/support regarding admit cards.

Karnataka likely to make 10-year domicile must for PG course aspirants

Sunday, January 12, 2014

 Even as the Aam Aadmi Party proposes to reserve college seats in Delhi exclusively for locals, the Congress government in Karnataka has decided to introduce a new stringent 10-year domicile condition on aspirants for postgraduate medical and dental seats in colleges in the state in an effort to ensure that more local students gain admissions to PG courses.

Medical education minister Dr Sharan Prakash Patil, while announcing the admission process for PG courses for the 2014-15 academic period here Friday, said the government has tried to ensure that more students from Karnataka get access to the 1010 government quota PG seats in the medical and dental streams for the academic year.
“A 10-year domicile condition is being introduced for admissions to government quota PG seats this year to protect the interests of local students. Previously, there were no domicile conditions and the majority of seats was being garnered by outsiders,’’ the medical education minister said.

Under the new domicile conditions, only students who have studied in Karnataka for years or children of a parent who has studied in the state for a minimum of 10 years are eligible for the government quota PG seats.
The minister said the measure was being taken because the state was surrendering 50 per cent of its PG medical and dental seats to an all-India quota while the remaining caters to Karnataka students.
The state government has decided to conduct PG entrance exams for the 2014-15 academic year through the National Board of Exams for the government quota in an effort to bring transparency into a system plagued by complaints of irregularities while being handled by the state government’s Rajiv Gandhi University for Health Sciences.

From the 2015-16 academic year, the state government has agreed to conduct all PG admissions through the merit list generated by the AIPGMEE national entrace test conducted by the NBE – which will result in all aspirants taking only one exam for entrance for admissions to all the 2,000-plus PG seats available in government and private colleges in Karnataka.

Courtesy source : PGTimes

Supreme Court tells Centre to decide on reservations in super-speciality posts

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Although the Supreme Court has left it to the Centre to decide whether there should be reservations in super-speciality posts such as those at All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), implementing such quotas will be wrong. Super-speciality posts, especially in medicine, require anexceptional degree of expertise and excellence that cannot be compromised. This is all the more so because such medical specialists are in the profession of saving human lives. Their patients expect the very best of medical care. Quotas here would dilute the quality of service and possibly lead to unfortunate accidents.

By its very definition a specialist is a professional who possesses knowledge and skills beyond the ordinary. In fact, merit is an automatic prerequisite for such a post. Naturally, all professionals in any given profession cannot become specialists. This fact is sufficient to exclude super-speciality posts from the remit of reservations. While the latter aims to empower the disadvantaged, the former is meant to recognise the most meritorious. As it is, the healthcare sector in India suffers from an acute shortage of specialist medical practitioners. According to the Planning Commission, the country`s government-run healthcare system faces an 88% shortage of specialist doctors.

In such a scenario, imposing quotas on super-specialist posts would further hamstring the healthcare sector. In fact, instead of pushing reservations, the government should invest in capacity building and training. This would not only boost the woefully inadequate human resources in medicine, but also provide enough opportunities to candidates from disadvantaged sections of society to rise to the top of the medical profession without compromising on merit. Similarly, super-speciality posts in other fields such as science, engineering, armed forces, etc need to be firewalled from reservations. Otherwise, India`s human capital and dreams of emerging as a knowledge hub will lie in tatters.


COUNTERVIEW
Let's counteract prejudice
Murali Ramachandran

The Supreme Court has wisely ruled that giving quotas in super-speciality medical posts is the Centre's call. Government should now proceed and implement reservation in all concerned institutions. The argument that reservation should only be for mundane or routine jobs and not for technical posts is rather dim-witted, and based on the conceited belief that there are no adequately qualified people in less privileged groups who can aspire to so-called speciality posts.

Consider, for instance, the ban on reservation for less privileged groups in faculty positions in AIIMS. Hundreds of students of less privileged groups have successfully passed graduate and postgraduate medical courses across many institutes of national excellence, including AIIMS. Reservation would ensure that they would also have a reasonable chance for claiming a fair share of faculty seats, without any discrimination. And how does quality suffer when all aspirants from less privileged groups also go through the same rigorous selection process for super-speciality posts?

Another major issue here is the reintroduction of a professional caste hierarchy in certain areas like medicine, engineering and other scientific and technical posts by designating them as super-speciality posts. This is a dangerous trend because it is in higher knowledge institutions that complaints of discrimination and prejudice against the less privileged have been most rampant. For instance, a recent report showed that people from scheduled tribes constituted less than 3% of teaching staff in these institutions. Data from the University Grants Commission also shows that the share of professors from scheduled castes in central universities has come down sharply in recent years. Though the reason cited by selectors is the lack of qualified candidates from this group, this is also used as an alibi to scuttle reservation and transfer seats to the open category candidates.



Courtesy sourced PGTimes

PG medical seats auctioned for Rs 4cr in India

TNN 13 Sep'13

BANGALORE: A group of parents sitting in a city medical college auditorium, facing a management team, appear to be attending an orientation session. A closer look reveals they are bidding for post-graduate medical seats. A parent stands up and announces he is ready to pay Rs 1 crore for an MD (radiology) seat. Another parent ups the bid by Rs 25 lakh. At the end of the two-hour session, the coveted seat goes to the ward of the highest bidder.

 So highly contested have been the auctions for PG medical seats this year that the going rate for an MD (radiology) seat touched Rs 4 crore at a prominent Chennai college. It hovered between Rs 3 crore and Rs 3.5 crore for the same course in Bangalore colleges.

Successful bids for orthopaedics and dermatology seats varied between Rs 1 crore and Rs 1.5 crore. A paediatrics seat cost Rs 1.6 crore.

Parents find the auction disturbing. "It's like buying property. The more money you have, the better your house is."

A source says: "It seems only the elite can pursue some courses. What is also shocking is that students are a witness to this trend. So the student whose parent could not pay those extra lakhs is scarred for life."

Reasons for the high demand are not far to seek. For the lakhs of students who aspire to specialize in radiology, there are only 683 seats every year. "The gap between demand and supply is enormous. The shortage is perpetuated so that the cost of seats rises every year'' officials told TOI.

College managements, on their part, say their repeated pleas to the Medical Council of India (MCI) to increase the number of seats have been in vain. "If we admit very few students for some courses, the cost of their training goes up. How do we make up for that?" asks the principal of a college where PG-seat rates this year hovered between Rs 1 crore and Rs 3.5 crore. The huge gap in the number of under-graduate and post-graduate medical seats makes medical education costlier every year.

TIMES VIEW: End 'not-for-profit' charade, let market forces decide fees

Apart from law and order, education and health are perhaps the two areas where a government has the greatest responsibility towards its citizens - in socialist as well as capitalist societies. Unfortunately, in India, we have seen the steady retreat of government as a provider of quality education and healthcare. It is clear that there is no option but for the private sector to step in to bridge the yawning gap in the number of schools, colleges and hospitals. The private sector — barring a handful of philanthropically-minded business groups and businessmen — will do so only if there is a return on investment. But the Supreme Court has, in an old judgment, specified that the "object of setting up an educational institution is by definition 'charitable'...and should not be to make a profit."

While the objective of providing a sterling education that is affordable and widely accessible is laudable, the reality on the ground is very different. What has compounded the situation is the farce of trusts and societies setting up "not-for-profit" medical and engineering colleges when everyone knows that they exist only for profit. Huge capitation fees, running into crores, have to be paid unofficially for admission to these colleges. In several states in India, a large number of these colleges — often of dodgy quality — are run by powerful politicians or their pals. Worse still, government policies on education are designed to protect and promote these businesses-masquerading as-charitable institutions. Kapil Sibal's legislative move as HRD minister to allow "foreign education providers" to enter India are said to have been scuttled by these "education barons", many of whom are top ministers in state governments. They feared that reputed institutions from countries such as the US and the UK would undercut their money-making ventures.

The problem with so many of our government policies — many of them handed down through the decades — is that they are hypocritical, antiquated and serve, either wittingly or otherwise, the vested interests of a few rather than the public good of the many. It is time to end this charade and allow the private sector to enter education with the stated, transparent objective of earning a profit. Where these colleges are set up without any substantial government subsidy, they should have the freedom to set fees as they deem fit. Let market forces determine how much students and their parents are willing to pay for a given quality of education (there is no compulsion to go to an "expensive college", especially if it's "not worth it"). If need be, the SC should be approached for a review.


Courtesy sourced by: SeethaLakshmiS, TimesofIndia.com

Radiology is top choice for aspiring doctors

Update 15 Sep'13

At his plush diagnostic centre in central Bangalore, Dr S Suresh and his staff of 10 conduct X-rays, CT scans, etc for eight to 10 hospitals across the city. After 5 pm, it's time for teleradiology services, where another team of 10, armed with radiology diplomas, interpret test results for hospitals across the US.

 Six years earlier, Dr Suresh's parents had paid a capitation fee of Rs 1.5 crore to enable their only son to pursue his masters in radiology at a prominent college in Bangalore. They have no regrets - within three years, they got their money back, given that Dr Suresh's practice makes Rs 8 lakh per month.

A recent TOI report on a postgraduate seat in radiology commanding a staggering Rs 4-crore capitation fee in Chennai has surprised some, but medical professionals are quick to point out that radiology is one of the most sought after specialties across the country.

In Maharashtra, a radiology PG seat fetches a capitation fee of around Rs 1.45 crore; in Bangalore, colleges with just one or two seats charge up to Rs 3 crore. With only 268 medical colleges across India offering PG radiology, shortage of seats raises the price. "Out of 49,418 medical students across India, only 688 get to do radiology every year," said L P Thangavelu, president, Indian Medical Association (IMA)'s Tamil Nadu chapter, citing MCI figures.

But why are people willing to pay such stiff capitation fees? Senior radiologists emphasize that in a salaried position, radiologists would never be able to recover their investment. But the prospect of starting their own scanning centres is a big draw. Mumbai-based radiologist Dr Bhavin Jhankaria, for instance, is considered a poster boy of sorts in the field of radiology having sold two start-ups to corporates over the last seven years.

Often, those who pay crores for seats are those who come from a family of radiologists or are in the diagnostic business. "It does not make business sense to invest Rs 3 crore for a course when there are no returns. Parents do it only if they are assured of the payback," said Dr Sudarshan Ballal, medical director, Manipal Hospitals.

With the prevailing practice of evidence-based medicine, diagnostics have become very important. As Dr Sandeep Jaipurkar, consultant radiologist, Vijaya Hospitals, Chennai, puts it, "A radiologist is the consultant of consultants." Madras Medical College dean Dr V Kanagasabai explains that today, diagnosis of any disease requires at least one scan. "Whether it is pregnancy, cancer or a head injury, the expertise of a radiologist is needed to confirm diagnosis," he said. Given the number of tests patients today are subject to, radiologists with their own diagnostic centres can make a pretty packet. "An MRI doesn't cost less than Rs 10,000. Do even 10 MRIs a day, you can earn Rs 1 lakh," said the head of a Mumbai-based medical college.

Another draw is the absence of night calls and beepers going off at odd hours. Students who sign up for the course are said to be on the ROAD to happiness, an acronym highlighting radiology, ophthalmology, anesthesiology and dermatology, all specialties assuring a balanced lifestyle, and offering good money for the least taxing work. "When I ask youngsters why they chose it, their answer is more money and no night shifts," said Dr Ballal.

 The job is also stress-free and flexible when compared to other specialties, as radiologists are rarely involved in treatment, and their job ends with diagnosis. Except during ultrasounds, they are not required to be present at the time of scanning. "They can diagnose reports of patients from anywhere," said Dr Thangavelu.

Dr Harsh Mahajan, Delhi-based radiologist, adds that with innovations like teleradiology and interventional radiology, the performance of (usually minimally invasive) medical procedures guided by imaging technologies gaining popularity, the scope of the field has also widened. With interventional radiology a radiologist, with his hair-like probes and CT scanner guide, can reach a deep-seated tiny growth in the lungs or clot in a liver vein. In many cases, these super-specialized radiologists are the first choice for placing a stent in a blood vessel in a near-gangrenous leg or fixing an aneurysm (a blood vessel in danger of rupturing) in the brain or the heart's biggest artery.

Teleradiology, on the other hand, operates in a BPO-style environment. "If there is an accident in the US and they need immediate images of the injury, hospitals send it to Indian teleradiologists for quick diagnosis," said Dr Sharan Patil, chief orthopaedic surgeon and CEO of Sparsh Hospitals, Bangalore.

It's no wonder that in postgraduate medicine, radiology is a hot favourite, on par with orthopedics, with medicine at a close third. "At AIIMS, radiology has been the most sought after course for almost a decade now," said Dr Rakesh Yadav, sub-dean, academics at AIIMS. A master's degree in radiology is adequate unlike other specialties, and one does not have to spend another year or two unless you want to super-specialize in interventional neuro or onco radiology.

Courtesy sourced :By Seetha Lakshmi S, TNN timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Saturday 25 January 2014

Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in India


Course: PG Medical, MD - RADIOLOGY
Course Duration - 3 years
Sl. No
Name & Address of Medical Colleges / Medical Institutions
University Affiliation
Annual Intake (Seats)
1.
Assam Medical College, Dirugarh, Assam
Dibrugarh University
4
2.
Rajendra Medical College, Ranchi, Bihar
Ranchi University
2
3.
Darbanga Medical College, Laharsarai, Bihar
Patna University
.
4.
University College of Medical Sciences, Delhi
Delhi University
1
5.
The Gujarat Cancer & Research Institute, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
Gujarat University
4
6.
Pt. BD Sharma PGIMS, Rohtak, Haryana
Maharshi Dayanand University
4
7.
GB Pant Hospital, Delhi
Rani Durgawati Vishwavidyalaya
.
8.
Krishna Institute of Medical Sciences, Karad, Maharashtra
Shivaji University
1
9.
Indra Gandhi Medical College & Hospital, Nagpur, Maharashtra
Nagpur University
2
10.
Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences, Wardha, Maharashtra
Nagpur University
2
11.
Seth GS Medical College, Maharashtra
Mumbai University
3
12.
Govt. Medical College, Maharashtra
Nagpur University
3
13.
Govt. Medical College, Aurangabad, Maharashtra 
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University
2
14.
Dayanand Medical College & Hospital, Ludhiana, Punjab
Punjab University
2
15.
Christian Medical College, Ludhiana
Punjab University
2
16.
Govt. Medical College, Patiala, Punjab
Punjab University
7
17.
Chennai Medical College, Chennai, Tamilnadu
TN Dr. MGR Medical University
.
18.
Christian Medical College, Vellore, Tamilnadu
TN Dr. MGR Medical University
.
19.
MLB Medical College, Jhansi,
Uttar Pradesh
Bundlekhand University
1
20.
S.N. Medical College, Agra,
Uttar Pradesh
Agra University
.
21.
GSVM Medical College, Kanpur,
Uttar Pradesh
Kanpur University
2
22.
Institute of Medical Sciences, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh
Banaras Hindu University
2
23.
NRS Medical College, Calcutta,     West Bengal
Calcutta University

Sl. No
Name & Address of Medical Colleges / Medical Institutions
University Affiliation
Annual Intake (Seats)
1.
Osmania Medical College, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh
NTR University of Health Sciences
2
2.
Andhra Medical College, Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh
NTR University of Health Sciences
1
3.
Kurnool Medical College, Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh
NTR University of Health Sciences
1
4.
Gandhi Medical College, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh
NTR University of Health Sciences
1
5.
Rangaraj Medical College, Kakinada, Andhra Pradesh
NTR University of Health Sciences
1
6.
Guntur Medical College, Guntur, Andhra Pradesh
NTR University of Health Sciences
1
7.
Kakatiya Medical College, Warangal, Andhra Pradesh
NTR University of Health Sciences
1
8.
Nizam’s Institute of Medical Sciences, Punjagutta, Hyderabad
.
2
9.
Guwahati Medical College, Assam
Guwahati University
4
10.
Darbanga Medical College, Bihar
L.N. Mithila University
4
11.
Patna Medical College, Bihar
Patna University
3
12.
GB Pant Hospital, Delhi
PG Institute
1
13.
Maulana Medical College, Delhi
Delhi University
3
14.
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Delhi
Autonomous
4
15.
Lady Hardinge Medical College, Delhi
Delhi University
2
16.
Army Hospital Research & Referral, Delhi
.
2
17.
BJ Medical College, Gujarat
Gujarat University
11
18.
MP Shah Medical College, Jamnagar, Gujarat
Saurashtra University
4
19.
Sheth KM School of Postgraduate Medicine & Research, Gujarat
Gujarat University
8
20.
Medical College, Baroda, Gujarat
MS University
4
21.
Goa Medical College, Goa
Goa University
2
22.
Indra Gandhi Medical College, Shimla
Himachal Pradesh University
2
23.
Government Medical College, Jammu
Jammu University
2
24.
Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College,
Belgaum, Karnataka
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences
3
25.
Adichunchanagiri Institute of Medical Sciences, Balagangadharanathanagar Karnataka
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences
1
26.
Mahadevappa Rampure Medical College, Gulbarga, Karnataka
Rajiv Gandhi Univer- sity of Health Sciences,
2
27.
St.Johns Medical College, Karnataka
Bangalore University
1
28.
Sri Devaraj Urs medical College Kolar, Karnataka
Rajiv Gandhi Univer- sity of health Sciences
1
29.
M.S Ramaiah Medical College Bangalore
.
2
30.
Sri Siddhartha Medical College Tumkur
.
2
31.
JJM Medical College Davangere, Karnataka
Kuvempu University
4
32.
Kasturba Medical College Manipal, Karnataka
Manipal Academy of Higher Education
6
33.
Medical College, Thrissur, Kerala
Calicut University
1
34.
Medcial College, Trivandrum, Kerala
Kerala University
2
35.
Calicut Medical College, Kerala
Calicut University
2
36.
Krishan Institute of Medical Sciences
Karad, Maharashtra
Shivaji University
1
37.
Rural Medical College Loni, Ahmednagar, Maharashtra
Poona University
3
38.
Topiwala National Medical College
Bombay, Maharashtra
Mumbai University
4
39.
Grant Medical College, Maharashtra
Mumbai University
3
40.
Bombay Hospital Institute of Medical Sciences, Mumbai, Maharashtra
Mumbai University
1
41.
B.J.Medical College, Maharashtra
Pune University
4
42.
Tata Memorial Hospital, Maharashtra
Mumbai University
3
43.
Armed Forces Medical College Pune, Maharashtra
Poona University
3
44.
SRTR Medical College Ambajogai, Maharashtra 
Dr.Babasaheeb Ambedkar Marathwada university
2
45.
LTM Medical College, Maharashtra
Mumbai University
4
46.
Dr.VM Medical College
Solapur, Maharashtra
Shivaji University
2
47.
MGM Medical College Indore, Madhya Pradesh
Devi Ahilya Vishwavidyalaya
4
48.
GR Medical College, Gwalior, M.P
Jiwaji Univesity
4
49.
Netaji Subash Chandra Bose Medical College, Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh
Rani Durgawati Vishwavidyalaya
3
50.
Pt. JNM Medical College Raipur, Madhya Pradesh
Ravishankar University
1
51.
Gandhi Medical college,Bhopal,M.P.
Baraktullah University
4
52.
SCB Medical College, Cuttack, Orissa
Utkal University
2
53.
KCG Medical College, Orissa
Berhampur University
1
54.
Jawaharlal Institute of PG Medical Education and Research ,Pondicherry
Pondicherry University
2
55.
Christian Medical College, Ludhiana
Punjab University
2
56.
Punjab University
Statutory autonomous
18
57.
Government Medical College, Patiala
Punjab University
7
58.
Govt. Medical College, Amritsar
 
Guru Nanak Dev University
3
59.
SMS Medical College, Jaipur
Rajasthan University
2
60.
JLN Medical College, Ajmer
Rajasthan University
2
61.
RNT Medical College, Udaipur
Rajasthan University
2
62.
Sardar Patel Medical College Bikaner, Rajasthan
University of Rajasthan
2
63.
Dr. SN Medical College, Jodhpur
Rajasthan University
2
64.
Chennai Medical College Chennai, Tamil Nadu
Dr. MGR Medical University
5
65.
Madurai Medical College Madurai, Tamil nadu
Dr.MGR Medical University
2
66.
Sri Ramachandra Medical College & Research Institute Porur, Chennai – 116 Tamil Nadu
Deemed University
3
67.
LLRM Medical University, U.P.
Meerut Universitiy
1
68.
SN Medical College, Agra, U.P.
Agra University
2
69.
KG Medical College, U.P.
Lucknow University
3
70.
JN Medical College, Aligarh, U. P.
 
Aligarh Muslim University
1
71.
Moti Lal Nehru Medical College, UP
Allahabad University
1
72.
RG Kar Medical College,West Bengal
Calcutta University
1
73.
Vivekananda Institute of Medical Sciences, Calcutta, West Bengal
Calcutta University
1
Sl. No
Name & Address of Medical Colleges/ Medical Institutions
University Affiliation
Annual Intake (Seats)
1.
Osmania Medical College, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh
NTR University of Health Sciences
3
2.
Patna Medical College, Patna, Bihar
Patna University
2
3.
Maulana Azad Medical College, Delhi
Delhi University
.
4.
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Delhi
Statutory Autonomous
2
5.
The Gujarat Cancer & Research Institute, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
Gujarat University
4
6.
BJ Medical College, Ahmedabad
Gujarat University
2
7.
K.M. School of Postgraduate Medicine & Research, Ahmedabad
Gujarat University
.
8.
Pt. BD Sharma PGIMS, Rohtak, Haryana
Maharshi Dayanand University
2
9.
Sher-I-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, Srinagar, J&K
Deemed University
4
10.
Govt. Medical College, Jammu
Jammu University
.
11.
Bangalore Medical College, Bangalore, Karnataka
Bangalore University
1
12.
Kasturba Medical College Manipal, Karnataka
Manipal Academy of Higher Education
2
13.
Kidwai Memorial Institute of Oncology, Bangalore, Karnataka
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences
1
14.
MGM Medical College, Indore, Madhya Pradesh
Devi Ahilya Vishwavidyalaya
2
15.
Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose Medical College, Jabalpur,
Madhya Pradesh
Rani Durgawati Vishwavidyalaya
2
16.
Pt. JNM Medical College, Raipur, Madhya Pradesh
Ravishankar University
1
17.
Gandhi Medical College, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh
Barkatullah University
2
18.
Govt. Medical College, Aurangabad, Maharashtra 
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University
2
19.
Tata Memorial Hospital, Maharashtra
Mumbai University
8
20.
SCB Medical College, Cuttack, Orissa
Utkal University
4
21.
Christian Medical College, Ludhiana
Punjab University
2
22.
PG Institute of Medical Education & Research, Chandigarh, Punjab
Statutory Autonomous
4
23.
Sardar Patel Medical College,
Bikaner, Rajasthan
Rajasthan University
1
24.
SMS Medical College, Jaipur
Rajasthan University
1
25.
Christian  Medical College Vellore, Tamilnadu
TN Dr. MGR Medical University
3
26.
Madurai Medical College, Madurai, Tamilnadu
TN Dr. MGR Medical University
2
27.
Chennai Medical College Chennai, Tamilnadu
TN Dr. MGR Medical University
4
28.
Cancer Institute, Chennai, Tamilnadu
TN Dr. MGR Medical University, Chennai
1
29.
Institute of Medical Sciences Varanasi ,Uttar Pradesh
Banaras Hindu University
1
30.
Motilal Nehru Medical College, Uttar Pradesh
Allahabad University
2
31.
KG Medical College,
Uttar Pradesh
Lucknow University
2
32.
GSVM Medical College,
Uttar Pradesh
Kanpur University
2
33.
SN Medical College,
Uttar Pradesh
Agra University
2
34.
NRS Medical College,
West Bengal
Calcutta University
1
35.
University college of Medicine Calcutta, West Bengal
Calcutta University
.
Sl. No
Name & Address of Medical Colleges / Medical Institutions
University Affiliation
Annual Intake (Seats)
1.
Maulana Azad Medical College, New Delhi
Delhi University
1

Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Rajasthan India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Delhi India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in West Bengal India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Uttar Pradesh, India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Tamil Nadu India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Punjab India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Orissa India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Madhya Pradesh
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Maharastra India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Haryana India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Gujarat India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Andhra Pradesh India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Karnataka India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Bihar India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Kerala India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Jammu India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Himachal Pradesh
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Assam India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Bangalore India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Jaipur India
Matrix of Post-Graduate Medical Degree Courses, MD - RADIOLOGY seats in Udaipur India