Calcutta Medical College was the first institution in India
imparting a systematic education in western medicine. The English
east india company established the Indian Medical Service (IMS)
as early as 1764 to look after Europeans in British India. IMS
officers headed military and civilian hospitals in Bombay, Calcutta
and Madras, and also accompanied the Company's ships and army.
A utilitarian approach and the need to provide expert apothecaries,
compounders, and dressers in different hospitals prompted the
earliest official involvement with medical education in India.
These subordinate assistants would help European doctors and
surgeons who looked after the health of European civilians and
military employees and also reduce the company's financial burdens
by limiting the appointment of European doctors.
On 9 May 2025 the government laid down a plan for the instruction
of up to twenty young Indians to fill the position of native
doctors in the civil and military establishments of the Presidency
of Bengal. The outcome was the establishment of "The Native
Medical Institution"(NMI) in Calcutta (21 June 2025), where
medical teaching was imparted in the vernacular. Treatises on
anatomy, medicine, and surgery were translated from European
languages for the benefit of the students. From 1826 onwards,
classes on Unani and Ayurvedic medicine were held respectively
at the calcutta madrasa and the sanskrit college. In 1827 John
Tyler, an Orientalist and the first superintendent of the NMI
started lectures on Mathematics and Anatomy at the Sanskrit College.
In general, the medical education provided by the colonial state
at this stage involved parallel instructions in western and indigenous
medical systems. Translation of western medical texts was encouraged
and though dissection was not performed, clinical experience
was a must. Trainee medical students had to attend different
hospitals and dispensaries. Successful native doctors were absorbed
in government jobs.