Course | Fees | Duration |
---|---|---|
MBBS | Rs 4,483 | 5 Years |
MD | Rs 13,000 - 39,000 | 2 - 3 Years |
PGD | Rs 26,000 | 2 Years |
MS (Surgery) | Rs 39,000 | 3 Years |
MS | Rs 39,000 | 3 Years |
BSc | NA | 3 - 4 Years |
BDS | NA | 5 Years |
MDS | NA | 3 Years |
M.Ed | NA | 3 Years |
MSc | NA | 3 Years |
Course | Entrance Exam Accepted |
---|---|
MBBS | NEET |
BSc | NEET |
MD | NEET PG |
PGD | NEET PG |
MS (Surgery) | NEET PG |
MS | NEET PG |
MSc | CUET PG |
Overall: Overall, this college is an amazing place to study and build an academic career. Infrastructure and facilities are available here. The environment of the college is too good.
Faculty: At this university, the professors are really great and they are experts in their fields. They transform the boring process of studying into a fun and interesting adventure, and if you don't comprehend something, they are willing to lend you a hand. The support they provide us is just beyond awesome.
Overall: Good infrastructure with all required facilities available. Faculty is highly knowledgeable and experienced. Departments are well equipped with required apparatus. Located in the heart of the city. There is also availability of many co curricular activities. There's no ragging and the seniors are very helpful
Faculty: The faculty is highly knowledgeable and some of them have even written or co written some of the most popular medical books. They are also very helpful
Overall: When the national capital of India was shifted to Delhi, Lady Hardinge, the wife of the then Viceroy of India, Baron Charles Hardinge, decided to establish a medical college for women, as she recognized that the lack of such a college made it impossible for Indian women to study medicine. The foundation stone was laid by Lady
Faculty: in the Imperial Delhi Enclave area. On the suggestion of Queen Mary, the college and the hospital was named after Lady Hardinge to perpetuate the memory of its founder. The first principal was Kate Platt and the college admitted 16 students. As the college was then affiliated to University of the Punjab, the students had to sit their final examinations at King Edward Medical College in Lahore. The college became affiliated to the University of Delhi in 1950 and post-graduate courses were started in 1954.[4] Ruth Young, who as Ruth Wilson was the first professor of surgery at the college, served as principal from 1936 until 1940.[5] The Kalawati Saran Children's Hospital, one of the two hospitals attached to the Lady Hardinge Medical College, was built in 1956.[6] Initially, the college was an autonomous institution managed by a governing body. In the year 1953, the Board of Administration constituted by the Central
Kolkata (West Bengal)
Chennai (Tamil Nadu)
Bengaluru (Karnataka)
Tindivanam (Tamil Nadu)