Medicine & Health Sciences
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6 months agoContributor-Level 9
With a NEET score of 280 marks, you have a good chance of securing admission in a private medical college in Uttar Pradesh, as private colleges generally have lower cutoff marks compared to government ones. For 2025 admissions, private medical college cutoffs for general category students typically start around the NEET qualifying percentile (50th), which corresponds to marks somewhat lower than top government colleges. Your 280 marks are above the minimum qualifying threshold.
New question posted
6 months agoNew answer posted
6 months agoContributor-Level 9
Government MBBS is tough at 450 (unless you're in a low? cutoff state + strong category advantage). You stand a fair shot at government BDS, AYUSH courses (BAMS/BHMS/BNYS), and Allied Health programs. Private MBBS (India) becomes viable, but budget could be sixty Lacs to over one crore rupees across the program. Smart alternates: BPT, B.Sc Nursing, B.Pharm, BMLT, Optometry, or MBBS abroad (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Georgia, Russia)—carefully vet MCI/NMC compliance. Share state, category, and budget, and I'll pinpoint exact colleges
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6 months agoContributor-Level 9
There's no gender? wise cutoff—General is General. For government MBBS, recent cycles hovered in the six hundred to six hundred thirty plus range; top state colleges often demand even higher. AIQ 15% vs state quota 85% also shifts the bar. For private MBBS, qualifying (fifty percentile—often around one hundred twenty to one hundred thirty marks) is enough, but fees balloon to sixty Lacs rupees plus. Always track your state counselling + AIQ separately.
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6 months agoContributor-Level 9
At three hundred forty, government MBBS in Delhi (including Dr. BSA) is practically out of reach for General/EWS. Reserved categories still usually need much higher. Realistic pivots: BDS (private/state), AYUSH (BAMS/BHMS/BNYS), BPT, B.Sc Nursing, Allied Health, or private MBBS (India/abroad) if finances permit (expect sixty lakh to over one crore rupees). If MBBS in a government college is your dream, consider a dedicated drop year, test series, and concept?first prep.
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6 months agoContributor-Level 9
Both are apex, high-volume neonatology centres. KEM Mumbai offers a massive tertiary care load, diverse pathologies, and cutting-edge neonatal research output; funding and multicentric collaborations are frequent. ICH–MMC, Chennai shines with a super specialised pediatric ecosystem under one umbrella, protocol? driven care and excellent teaching culture. Consider: research mentorship fit, NICU bed strength, ventilation/HFOV, fellowship pipeline, simulation labs, and post DM placement networks. If you crave research + national policy presence, KEM slightly edges. For a holistic pediatric super? speciality immersion, ICH? MMC is stella
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6 months agoContributor-Level 9
Most GNM programs require Class 12; HSLC (Class 10) alone isn't enough. If you've finished Class 12 with forty to forty-five percent, you can apply (Science preferred, but many states allow Arts/Commerce). The hospital/college typically follows state nursing counselling or its own merit list/entrance test, plus medical fitness and interview. Fees hover from fifty thousand to one lakh fifty thousand rupees per year. If you only have HSLC, first complete Class 12 (NIOS/open school is fine), or opt for ANM, then bridge to GNM/B.Sc Nursing later.
New answer posted
6 months agoContributor-Level 9
Realistically, no. MBBS government seats at GRMC, Gwalior require far higher NEET scores (commonly 550+ for General, lower but still high for reserved categories). With 100–130, explore BDS (private), BAMS/BHMS, BPT, B.Sc Nursing, Allied Health Sciences, B.Pharm, or private MBBS abroad (if finances allow). Consider a drop year with coached prep if MBBS at a good government college is your non? negotiable dream.
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6 months agoNew answer posted
6 months agoContributor-Level 6
Visit the official website of CMC distance education portal.
Create a new applicant profile Fill in the details such as your mobile number and email.
And then again login to the website using the email and password you have given while registering.
Fill up the applicant form by your personal details and academic details.
Keep monitoring your email after submission.
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