(
| |
| Dhaka
Medical College and Hospital |
 |
| Established |
1946 |
| Type |
Public |
| Staff |
3,406 |
| Students |
1,050 |
| Location |
Dhaka, Bangladesh |
| Campus |
Urban, 25 acres (0.101 km˛) |
Dhaka Medical College and Hospital (DMCH), established in 1946
during the British colonial rule, is the top medical college in
Bangladesh. Situated at the heart of the city near the Bangladesh
University of Engineering and Technology, Dhaka Medical College is an
educational institution with a rich heritage.
History
Established in 1946, it took about 10 years for the Dhaka Medical
College and Hospital to start operations because of bureucratic
entanglements. The Dhaka Medical College and its affiliate, Dhaka Medical
College Hospital, were accommodated in a building constructed in 1904 as
the Secretariat Building for the province of East Bengal and Assam. The
building was transferred to the University of Dhaka in 1921. One part of
it was converted into the university's medical centre, one part into a
student dormitory, while the residual part was allotted for use as the
academic wing of the Faculty of Arts.
The whole building was used as "American Base Hospital" during World
War II. When the Americans left, a one hundred bed hospital was
established in it. This created the base of the DMCH, which at the
beginning had only four departments - Medical, Surgery, Gynaecology and
ENT. The institute did not have any hostel for students. Male students
were allowed to reside in Dhaka University's student halls, but girls had
to attend classes from their homes. After the partition of Bengal in 1947,
a large number of students came from Calcutta Medical College and sought
admission in Dhaka Medical College. Similarly, many left Dhaka Medical
College for Calcutta. The college and hospital premises were expanded in
new temporary sheds, some of which were built for outdoor services of the
hospital and some others for students' hostels. New buildings for hostel,
college and hospital were constructed in phases: a hostel for girls in
1952, a hostel for male students in 1954-55, a new complex of academic
buildings in 1955, and a hostel for internee doctors in 1974-75.
General
Information
Dhaka Medical College and Hospital now has many departments - Anatomy,
Physiology, Biochemistry, Pharmacology, Community Medicine, Forensic
Medicine, Pathology, Microbiology, Virology, Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics
and Gynaecology, Paediatrics, Neuromedicine, Cardiology, Nephrology,
Gastroenterology, Haematology, Dermatology and Venereology (Skin and
Venereal Diseases), Psychiatry, Burn and Plastic Surgery, Orthopaedics,
Urology, Neurosurgery, Anaesthesiology, Ophthalmology, Laryngorhinootology
(ENT), Paediatric Surgery, Casualty Surgery, Radiology, Radiotherapy and
Oncology, Blood Transfusion, Physical Medicine, Nuclear Medicine etc.
There are laboratories for each of the departments of Physiology,
Biochemistry, Pharmacology, Histology, Histo-pathology, Clinical
Pathology, and Microbiology. It has also a dissection hall and a museum of
the department of Anatomy. The college has about 176 teachers and about
1,050 students. The annual intake of fresh students in its undergraduate
programme is 180 from the year 2006. The postgraduate courses offered by
the college include master of surgery (MS) in branches like urology,
neurosurgery and orthopaedic surgery, doctor of medicine (MD) in
paediatrics, master of philosophy (MPhil) in radiology, and diplomas in a
number of disciplines such as anaesthesiology, ophthalmology, laryngology,
gynaecology and obstetrics, child health and cardiology. Dhaka Medical
College and DMCH were under one administration until 1975, when they were
made two different entities with a Principal as the head of the college
and a Director as the chief administrator of the hospital. The two
institutions, however, continue to complement each other. The various
buildings of DMCH and its other facilities excluding the medical college
now stand on about 25 acres of land. It has 28 departments and 36 wards,
234 full-time doctors, 380 internee doctors, 560 nurses, 24 paramedics,
and 1,104 other staff. The number of beds in wards, units and cabins total
about 1,400, of which 130 are paying beds and 128 are in cabins. Its
occupancy rate is about 130%. It provides both indoor and outdoor services
and serves about 3,000 outdoor patients daily.
Facts
For the top 180 freshmen places in 2006 in whole Bangladesh, nearly
18000 (eighteen thousand) applicants sat for the medical college entrance
examination. The different batches of Dhaka Medical College are named with
the prefix K, as for example K-60, which denotes the 60th batch of the
college that was admitted in 2003. The meaning of the prefix K is still
mysterious and there are different opinions. Some say, K, being the 11th
letter of the English alphabet, signifies the 11th medical college of
the-then Indian subcontinent. Some other opine that K is for Kalcutta, as
many of the first students came from Calcutta Medical college.
DMCH draws in students not only from the whole of Bangladesh, but from
throughout South Asia with students hailing from as far away as Kashmir to
Nepal and Bhutan. DMC also pioneered some nationwide appreciated volunteer
organizations like, Sandhani, CCDMC, etc..
Students of DMCH are also well-known for their cultural activities.