Douglas G Altman: h-index, Total Citations, and Citation Map
Douglas G Altman's h-index is 298 (1144 i10-index, 1,111,678+ total citations across 101+ publications) according to Google Scholar as of June 2026. Douglas G Altman is affiliated with Centre for Statistics in Medicine, University of Oxford.
Douglas G Altman is a researcher affiliated with Centre for Statistics in Medicine, University of Oxford, specializing in biostatistics, statistics, medical statistics. Their work has been cited 1,111,678 times. This profile visualizes their global influence, highlighting strong citation networks in United States.
Douglas G Altman's Citation Metrics
Bibliometric impact based on 101 indexed publications.
- H-Index
- 298
- i10-Index
- 1144
- Total Citations
- 1,111,678
- Citing Countries
- 53
As of June 2026.
Douglas G Altman has an h-index of 298 and 1,111,678 total citations across 101 publications, with research cited by institutions in 53 countries.
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We've mapped 5,000 of 1,111,678 citations for Douglas G Altman
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Global Impact Map
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Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement
2009196,959
Top Citing Countries
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.
542 citing papers could not be classified (no author data) — excluded from the percentages above.
The researcher developed foundational statistical methods for assessing agreement between clinical measurement techniques, establishing a standard framework widely adopted across medical and scientific disciplines.
The researcher developed foundational statistical methods for assessing agreement between clinical measurement techniques, establishing a standard framework widely adopted across medical and scientific disciplines.
The researcher established the STROBE guidelines, a seminal framework for standardizing the reporting of observational epidemiological studies to enhance transparency and reproducibility.
Citation trend (last 10 years)Click to expand
Citation Trend (Last 10 Years)
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About Douglas G Altman's research
Douglas G Altman is a researcher in biostatistics, statistics and medical statistics at Centre for Statistics in Medicine, University of Oxford. Their work has been cited 1,111,678 times across 101 publications (h-index 298), according to Google Scholar.
Their most-cited work, “Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement” (2009), has accumulated 196,959 citations. Other influential works include “Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement” (2009) with 195,262 citations and “Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement” (2009) with 157,684 citations.
Citations of Douglas G Altman's research come primarily from United States, United Kingdom and China, reflecting international research impact across 5+ countries. The interactive citation map above shows the full geographic distribution of the institutions citing this work.











