Government Medical College, Kollam (ESIC Medical College Hospital) |
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ESI Corporation | |
Entrance of ESIC Medical College, Kollam
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Geography | |
Location | Parippally, Kollam, Kerala, India |
Coordinates | 8°48′40″N 76°44′56″E / 8.811°N 76.749°ECoordinates: 8°48′40″N 76°44′56″E / 8.811°N 76.749°E |
Organisation | |
Funding | ESI Corporation |
Hospital type | Medical College |
Affiliated university | Kerala University of Health Sciences |
Services | |
Emergency department | Yes |
Beds | 500 |
History | |
Founded | 21 December 2013 |
Links | |
Website | [1] |
The Employee's State Insurance Hospital & Medical College, Parippally or Government Medical College, Kollam is the third medical college in Kollam district, Kerala, India, run by the ESI Corporation of India. It is the second medical college project from ESI Corporation of India in the country and the first of its kind in Kerala state. Rs. 480 crores worth Medical College was inaugurated by Chief Minister Oommen Chandy in Parippally on 21 December 2013, is the largest Medical College in Kerala in terms of buildings (around 27 blocks).
With the inauguration of the ESI Medical College in Parippally, the demand of the people of Kollam district to have a medical college of their own in the government sector has been fulfilled. Parippally ESIC Medical College is a 500 bedded medical college with a total built-up area of 12,029 sqmtr.
The medical college was initially a project of ESI Corporation. Kodikunnil Suresh, the then Central Deputy Minister of Labour and Employment, announced the ESIC medical college project at Parippally in Kollam during 2012-2013. The works for hospital has been completed and commissioned in December 2013. But in 2014, the NDA lead central ministry decided not to go ahead with ESIC Medical college projects based on a report of the sub-committee that, the projects would probably exhaust the ESI corporation fund. Later in 2016, the UDF lead Kerala Government had decided to take over the institution because of the intervention by the Kollam MP, N.K. Premachandran. But the government had failed to appoint needed faculties and other employees for the institution.