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H-Index Ranking - Medicine

Are you looking for the H-Index Journals Ranking? You are in the right place.

The H-Index is a metric that captures both the productivity and citation impact of a journal’s publications. A journal with an H-Index of h means it has at least h articles each cited at least h times.

Below you will find the most recent list of journals sorted by H-Index value, alongside their SJR Score and Quartile classification.



# Journals List H-Index SJR Score Quartile
1 New England Journal of Medicine 1130 26.015
2 The Lancet 855 14.607 Q1
3 JAMA Journal of the American Medical Association 739 6.695 Q1
4 Circulation 654 7.800 Q1
5 Journal of Clinical Investigation 527 5.117 Q1
6 Journal of the American College of Cardiology 472 8.343 Q1
7 Gastroenterology 442 7.645 Q1
8 Annals of Internal Medicine 419 3.845 Q1
9 American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine 404 6.237 Q1
10 JAMA Psychiatry 394 6.578 Q1
11 The Lancet Oncology 382 12.270 Q1
12 American Journal of Psychiatry 381 4.231 Q1
13 JAMA Internal Medicine 375 4.922 Q1
14 Clinical Infectious Diseases 372 3.995 Q1
15 Brain 365 4.437 Q1
16 The Lancet Neurology 336 9.819 Q1
17 European Heart Journal 329 3.450 Q1
18 Gut 328 8.588 Q1
19 Radiology 320 4.073 Q1
20 Journal of the American Society of Nephrology 306 4.450 Q1
21 Kidney International 304 3.868 Q1
22 Annals of Oncology 277 11.945 Q1
23 Ophthalmology 267 3.913 Q1
24 Science Translational Medicine 265 6.361 Q1
25 JAMA Neurology 257 6.697 Q1
26 Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 225 3.178 Q1
27 JAMA Pediatrics 209 5.109 Q1
28 Cancer Discovery 209 7.268 Q1
29 Human Reproduction Update 203 4.021 Q1
30 Critical Care 200 3.577 Q1
31 Ca A Cancer Journal for Clinicians 198 86.091
32 Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology 198 14.809 Q1
33 JAMA Surgery 193 3.623 Q1
34 Clinical Microbiology and Infection 185 3.587 Q1
35 Nature Reviews Gastroenterology and Hepatology 173 10.178 Q1
36 BMC Medicine 172 3.447 Q1
37 Annual Review of Public Health 166 9.963 Q1
38 Nature Reviews Rheumatology 166 3.459 Q1
39 Nature Reviews Cardiology 164 6.932 Q1
40 Journal of Thoracic Oncology 161 5.866 Q1
41 The Lancet Respiratory Medicine 159 11.204 Q1
42 European Journal of Heart Failure 156 5.601 Q1
43 Nature Reviews Disease Primers 155 11.388 Q1
44 Cancer Treatment Reviews 153 3.589 Q1
45 JACC Cardiovascular Imaging 144 4.435 Q1
46 Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network JNCCN 138 4.098 Q1
47 Journal of Infection 130 3.904 Q1
48 The Lancet Global Health 123 7.370 Q1
49 JAMA Network Open 106 4.108 Q1
50 JAMA Cardiology 99 7.371 Q1

What is the H-Index?

The H-Index (or Hirsch Index) is a metric that captures both the productivity and the citation impact of a publication. A journal (or author) has an H-Index of h if it has published at least h papers, each of which has been cited at least h times. So a journal with an H-Index of 50 has published at least 50 papers, each cited at least 50 times.

How is the H-Index Calculated?

  1. List all papers published by the journal, sorted by citation count (highest first).
  2. Walk down the list. The H-Index is the largest position n where the n-th paper has at least n citations.
  3. Example: a journal has 5 papers with citation counts {12, 8, 5, 3, 1}. The H-Index is 3 — because the 3rd paper has 5 citations (≥3), but the 4th paper has only 3 citations (=3, qualifies but the 5th has 1, breaking the chain).

The H-Index can never decrease over time — only grow as more citations accumulate. Unlike Impact Factor, it’s not affected by a single “blockbuster” paper that gets thousands of citations.

H-Index vs Impact Factor vs SJR

MetricWhat It MeasuresTime WindowStrength
H-IndexProductivity + sustained impactLifetimeResists outliers
Impact FactorAverage citations per paper2 yearsRecent activity
SJRPrestige-weighted citations3 yearsQuality signal

Why the H-Index Matters

  • Long-term reputation: H-Index reflects sustained influence, not one-off bursts.
  • Hard to game: A journal can’t artificially boost its H-Index by publishing one viral paper.
  • Cross-database: Available from Scopus, Web of Science and Google Scholar (each gives slightly different numbers).
  • Used for evaluation: Many funding agencies use H-Index alongside other metrics.

H-Index FAQ

What is a good H-Index for a journal?

It varies by field. In medicine, a strong journal often has H-Index > 100. In niche subfields, H-Index > 30 is excellent. Always compare within the same subject area using our H-Index Ranking.

Why are H-Index values different in Scopus vs Google Scholar?

Each database has its own citation index. Google Scholar typically gives a higher H-Index because it indexes more sources (including books, theses, gray literature). Scopus and WOS are stricter and considered more rigorous.

Can the H-Index decrease?

No — the H-Index can only stay the same or grow as new citations come in.

How can I find high-H-Index journals in my field?

Use our Advanced Journal Finder sorted by H-Index, or browse our H-Index Ranking by subject.

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