Institution Profile

Institution Profile

All-India Institute of Medical Sciences, Delhi

Despite being in the eye of numerous storms over the past half century, AIIMS has served as a laboratory to develop brilliant minds in undergraduate and postgrad medical studies

Despite regularly being in the news for the wrong reasons (epicentre of student anti-reservations stir, forced resignation of director etc), the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi, is the premier institute of medical education and research in south Asia. Consistently ranked as India’s most preferred medical college in India Today rankings of the country’s top institutions of higher education, AIIMS was the brainchild of newly independent India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru and the then Union health minister, Rajkumari Amrit Kaur. Over the past half century it has served as a laboratory to develop brilliant minds in undergraduate and postgrad medical studies.  

The idea of AIIMS was incubated by a pre-independence era committee chaired by distinguished civil servant Sir Joseph Bhore, which recommended the establishment of a national medical teaching university to produce highly qualified manpower for the nation’s exponentially growing healthcare sector. The dreams of Nehru, Amrit Kaur and the Bhore Committee’s recommendations coalesced to promote AIIMS. Backed by a grant of US $ 1 million from the New Zealand government, AIIMS was registered in 1952. Subsequently it was formally established as an autonomous institution through the All India Institute of Medical Sciences Act, 1956.

Today AIIMS discharges three major roles: it delivers qualitative undergrad and postgraduate education in medicine, nursing and allied health fields at rock-bottom prices; serves as a state-of-the-art referral hospital for affordable medical and surgical care; and conducts advanced research in the health and biological sciences. To fulfill these objectives, over the past five decades AIIMS has developed comprehensive facilities for teaching, research and patient care. As provided in its promotional legislation, the institute also offers a raft of undergraduate programmes in medicine, nursing and related areas and postgraduate courses in all basic and clinical medical specialties and super specialties. The institute awards its own degrees and admission into its medical courses is based on stringent pan-India entrance exams (see box).

Teaching and research at AIIMS are conducted in 42 disciplines by the institute’s 475 strong faculty supported by 6,614 non-teaching/ research personnel. On average, about 250 graduate and 470 postgraduate medical practitioners emerge from AIIMS’ portals annually. The institute has also established a reputation in the field of medical research and publishes about 800 papers by its faculty and research associates annually.

"It is our constant endeavour to set internationally benchmarked academic standards at AIIMS. Our rigorous admission process admits only 50 students per year out of 100,000 who apply from all over India, ensuring that only the very best brains are admitted. Our teacher-student ratio of 1:10 is excellent and on a par with international norms. Moreover we have a frequent system of assessment which thoroughly tests the knowledge of students through the year. Academically our emphasis is as much on research as on hands-on training so that our students are equipped to handle all types of emergency situations. Our medical curriculum is revised and updated every 18 months and sets a template for other medical colleges countrywide," says Dr. Sunil Chembur deputy dean of AIIMS.

Yet perhaps the unique selling proposition of AIIMS is that in effect it is a giant laboratory providing almost unlimited experiential opportunities to students. Little wonder AIIMS graduates are prized round the world. Astonishingly, the 50 students fortunate to be admitted into India’s leading medical school are required to pay a nominal tuition fee of a mere Rs.250 per year or Rs.20 per month. Even this derisory tuition fee — made possible by a Central government grant of Rs.400 crore per year — is payable in two installments. "Our tuition fees have been deliberately kept low so that meritorious students from economically weaker sections don’t feel inhibited about seeking admission," says Chembur.

AIIMS’ well-stocked library houses 61,423 volumes, 53,547 reference journals and 14,008 biomedical reports. It subscribes to 490 journals and 80 newsletters and is wired with computers, a microfilm library reader and a reader-printer facility. The institute also runs a college of nursing and trains students for a B.Sc (Hons) programme in nursing with about 850 nursing students graduating from AIIMS annually. Twenty-five clinical departments — including four super specialty centres — treat all types of affilictions and ailments with support from pre- and para-clinical departments.

The staggering number of services provided by AIIMS is testified by the 1.5 million patients doctors of the institute treat in its outpatient departments (OPD) every year. Another 80,000 are treated as inpatients and a mind-boggling 100,000 major and minor surgeries are performed every year at the hospital.

According to Chembur, AIIMS is currently focussing on upgrading its curriculum to meet international norms. Also, since the retention of young doctors has become a problem — lured as they are by better-paying private hospitals — AIIMS is trying to improve its salary packages, provide better work conditions etc. "Research will assume paramount importance and some tie-ups with foreign universities are also planned. Ultimately, we have to focus on upgradation and consolidation if we have to retain our slot as one of the world’s foremost medical colleges," he says.

Admission & fees

E
very year the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences admits students into its prestigious MBBS programme through an all-India entrance examination. Students who have secured a minimum of 55 percent in their class XII examination are eligible to write this entrance test usually held in the month of April each year. Last year about 100,000 students wrote this exam. AIIMS also offers post-graduate courses in 42 specialties.

Programmes. MBBS; MD/MS; B.Sc in nursing, paramedical and medical specialities; B.Sc (human biology); M.Sc in six specialties; Ph D in seven specialties.

Accommodation. AIIMS is a residential university — faculty members, other staff and students live on campus. There are eight hostels for undergraduate students (five for men and three for women) with a capacity to accommodate 850 students. Separate hostels (eight) are available for postgraduate students. Hostel fees: Rs.1,000 per month.

Tuition fee (annual): Rs.250; other fees: Rs.265

For more information contact Assistant Controller of Examination, Examination Section, AIIMS, Ansari Nagar, New Delhi 110 029


Neeta Lal
(Delhi)


Swarthmore College, USA


Consistently ranked among America’s top three liberal arts colleges, Swarthmore is one of the few in the us to also offer undergrad engineering education

S
ited on the outskirts of Philadelphia, Swarthmore College has for several decades been consistently ranked among America’s top three liberal arts colleges. In its 2006 ranking of America’s colleges, U.S. News & World Report rated Swarthmore the #3 liberal arts college in the US, behind Williams and Amherst. This private co-ed college which is regularly included among the ‘Little Ivies’, boasts a student-teacher ratio of 8:1 and offers over 50 study programmes to its 1,479 undergraduate students. With an endowment corpus of $1.69 billion (Rs.___ crore), Swarthmore is one of the few liberal arts colleges in the US to offer undergrad education in engineering in addition to its bachelor’s programme.

Promoted in 1864 by the Religious Society of Friends (aka the Quakers) on a leafy green 357-acre campus, Swarthmore is particularly noted for its Oxford tutorials-style honours programme, which permits students to sign up for intensive double-credit seminars from their junior year to write extensive honours theses. Swarthmore is also a member of the Tri-College Consortium (TriCo) with the neighbouring Bryn Mawr and Haverford colleges, which allows students from the triumvirate to cross-register for courses of the others. Moreover TriCo member colleges are additionally affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania and students are free to register for courses there as well. Unsurprisingly, Swarthmore’s eminent alumni include eight MacArthur Foundation fellows and four Nobel Prize winners.

Philadelphia. The second largest city on the east coast, Philadelphia (pop. 5.8 million) also boasts the second largest number of colleges (over 50) in the US. A major cultural centre, its citizens have played a pivotal role in American history. The city’s oldest quarters are rich with monuments and streets from the era of Dr. Benjamin Franklin. Philadelphia is also home to more than 100 significant museums and historical sites.

But the favourite hangouts of Philadelphia’s college students are the city’s downtown restaurants, coffee shops, art galleries, cinemas and shopping areas. A large performing arts community offers not only the Philadelphia Orchestra but also the opera, ballet, jazz, contemporary and classical music and theatre. From the Swarthmore campus, Philadelphia is less than half hour by train.

The city’s climate tends to be cold from November to April. Summers are hot and humid and autumn and spring temperatures are moderate.

Campus facilities. Located 11 miles southwest of Philadelphia, Swarthmore’s idyllic, 357-acre campus is a designated arboretum, replete with rolling lawns, creek, wooded hills, and hiking trails. From its state-of-the-art science complex to its new, environment friendly halls of residence, Swarthmore’s buildings and architecture blend seamlessly with its green campus.

The college’s main bibliotheques are the McCabe, the Cornell Library of Science and Engineering, and the Underhill Music Library. Specialised collections include black studies of the Black Cultural Center, Jewish classical texts (Beit Midrash), the Friends Historical Library, the Peace Collection, and a Rare Books Room. These libraries together house over 750,000 print volumes, extensive collections of film and music, and an expanding digital library of over 10,000 online journal subscriptions, reference materials, e-books, and other scholarly databases.

Sports facilities include 12 outdoor and six indoor tennis courts; six full-length indoor basketball courts; ten outdoor playing fields; an Athletic Events Center with seating for 1,800; an indoor field house; an outdoor eight-lane, 400-metre Versaturf track; indoor swimming pool with electronic timing systems; five squash courts with spectator galleries; a New Fitness Center with aerobic and Med-X equipment; and a professionally staffed sports medicine facility.

Moreover there are more than 100 chartered clubs and organisations at Swarthmore, in addition to many other unchartered groups.

Admission. Swarthmore’s admission process is very competitive and selective. Of the 4,850 worldwide who applied for admission in 2006, only 897 were admitted. Successful completion of Plus Two or equivalent is the minimum eligibility criterion for admission into the college’s undergrad programmes. Other application requirements include: an admission application, a student essay, high school academic records, extra-curricular activities profile, recommendations, official transcripts of the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT I and II tests) and Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) and an application fee of $60 (Rs.2,760).

Admission applications must reach by January 2, 2007 for the academic year beginning September. For further information contact Swarthmore College, Admissions Office, 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081. Ph: 610 328 8300; Fax: 610 328 8580; e-mail: admissions@swarthmore.edu; website: www.swarthmore.edu.

Accommodation. Most students live on campus in one of the 14 halls of residence that range from small (eight students) to large (214) and offer a variety of housing options. Students dine together in a common central dining hall. Moreover coffee and snack bars are open until late and serve everything from burgers to lattes and sushi.

Degree programmes. Swarthmore offers more than 600 degree programmes including 50 study courses; an exceptional honours programme; individual special majors; a programme in education leading to Pennsylvania secondary school certification; and undergraduate research opportunities in the sciences, social sciences, humanities, and engineering (see box).

Scholastic options at Swarthmore

Swarthmore College offers more than 50 courses of study and an honours programme. The courses of study include:

Art and art history; Asian studies; astronomy; biology; black studies; chemistry and biochemistry; classics; cognitive science; comparative literature; computer science; dance; economics; educational studies; engineering; English literature; environmental studies; film and media studies; Francophone studies; German studies; history; interpretation theory; Latin American studies; linguistics; mathematics and statistics; medieval studies; Arabic; Chinese; French; German; Japanese; Russian; Spanish; music; peace and conflict studies; philosophy; physics; political science; psychology; public policy; religion; sociology and anthropology; theatre; women’s studies

Bill of costs (US$ annual)

Tuition fee: 31,196
Room and board: 9,764
Student activity fee: 320

Total: 41,280

NB: $=Rs.46

Summiya Yasmeen