Jon Minton: h-index, Total Citations, and Citation Map
Jon Minton's h-index is 28 (40 i10-index, 2,146+ total citations across 5+ publications) according to Google Scholar as of May 2026. Jon Minton is affiliated with University of Glasgow.
Jon Minton is a researcher affiliated with University of Glasgow, specializing in Data Visualisation, health economics, sociology and social policy. Their work has been cited 2,146 times. This profile visualizes their global influence, highlighting strong citation networks in United States.
Jon Minton's Citation Metrics
Bibliometric impact based on 5 indexed publications. Of these, 4 are original research articles — the rest are literature highlights, conference abstracts or theses.
- H-Index
- 28
- i10-Index
- 40
- Total Citations
- 2,146
- Citing Countries
- 16
As of May 2026.
Jon Minton has an h-index of 28 and 2,146 total citations across 5 publications, with research cited by institutions in 16 countries.
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Global Impact Map
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Top Cited Works
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COVID-19–exploring the implications of long-term condition type and extent of multimorbidity on years of life lost: a modelling study
2021215
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Top Citing Institutions
Visa Evidence Package
Views and exports tuned for EB-1A, O-1A, and EB-2 NIW petitions. Sustained acclaim, geographic reach, and independent-citation filtering are the strongest evidence categories immigration adjudicators look for.
Significant Contributions
Auto-detected research lines — a seminal paper and the follow-up work building on it. Review and edit before using in a petition. Each Free PDF opens in a new tab — EB-1A organises this into the structure USCIS applies to Criterion 5 of 8 CFR § 204.5(h)(3)(v); EB-1B re-frames it under § 204.5(i)(3) (outstanding researcher); NIW presents it under prong 2 of Matter of Dhanasar.
The researcher challenged the criminological assumption of a fixed age-crime curve by analyzing Scotland's crime drop, offering a critical re-evaluation of this foundational concept.
The researcher provided a seminal analysis of the extent, processes, and nature of poverty suburbanization in British cities between 2004 and 2016.
The researcher developed a modelling framework to quantify how long-term conditions and multimorbidity extent influence years of life lost during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Citation trend (last 10 years)Click to expand
Citation Trend (Last 10 Years)
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