Nadia Badawi: h-index, Total Citations, and Citation Map
Nadia Badawi's h-index is 70 (257 i10-index, 26,155+ total citations across 549+ publications) according to Google Scholar as of June 2026. Nadia Badawi is affiliated with Children's Hospital Westmead, The University of Sydney.
Nadia Badawi is a researcher affiliated with Children's Hospital Westmead, The University of Sydney, specializing in Macquarie Group Foundation Chair of Cerebral Palsy. Their work has been cited 26,155 times. This profile visualizes their global influence, spanning a global audience.
Nadia Badawi's Citation Metrics
Bibliometric impact based on 549 indexed publications. Of these, 4 are original research articles — the rest are literature highlights, conference abstracts or theses.
- H-Index
- 70
- i10-Index
- 257
- Total Citations
- 26,155
- Citing Countries
- 0
As of June 2026.
Nadia Badawi has an h-index of 70 and 26,155 total citations across 549 publications, with research cited by institutions in 0 countries.
Download Exports (PNG, CSV, Poster)
Free Viewing Nadia Badawi's citation map is always free. Pay once to download poster, PNG, and CSV files for offline use or your visa packet.
We've mapped 5,000 of 26,155 citations for Nadia Badawi
We've shown the most-cited 5,000. Unlock the full crawl (26,105 more citations) to see every institution citing this scholar.
Global Impact Map
Visualizing the geographic distribution of institutions that have cited your work.
Starting…
Pins will appear here as institutions are resolved — no need to refresh.
Early, accurate diagnosis and early intervention in cerebral palsy: advances in diagnosis and treatment
20172,289
Top Citing Countries
Top Citing Institutions
No institution data available.
Citation trend (last 10 years)Click to expand
Citation Trend (Last 10 Years)
Related Guides
Learn how to use citation maps for your research and visa applications.
About Nadia Badawi's research
Nadia Badawi is a researcher in Macquarie Group Foundation Chair of Cerebral Palsy at Children's Hospital Westmead, The University of Sydney. Their work has been cited 26,155 times across 549 publications (h-index 70), according to Google Scholar.
Their most-cited work, “Early, accurate diagnosis and early intervention in cerebral palsy: advances in diagnosis and treatment” (2017), has accumulated 2,289 citations. Other influential works include “Epidemiology of neonatal encephalopathy and hypoxic–ischaemic encephalopathy” (2010) with 1,787 citations and “State of the evidence traffic lights 2019: systematic review of interventions for preventing and treating children with cerebral palsy” (2020) with 1,571 citations.











