Following our reveal of the world’s top medical schools in 2021 – part of the QS World University Rankings by Subject – we have taken a look at recent research activity at universities around the world, to see which institutions are at the forefront of the global research effort into COVID-19.
Using data compiled in collaboration with our research partners Elsevier Scopus, we were able to identify some of the top medical schools which are producing the most cited scientific papers into the virus.
Mainland China
Perhaps unsurprisingly, given it was the first location to encounter the virus, Mainland China is home to several universities which are leading the global research efforts. 11 percent of the global research into COVID-19, as indexed by Elsevier Scopus, originates from China. While this will be partly due to the fact Chinese researchers have had more time to study the virus than other nations, the speed and quality of the research being done at universities such as Tsinghua University, Peking University and Wuhan University is impressive.
The most widely cited academic paper on COVID-19 was a multi-author paper published in The Lancet, one of the world’s leading medical journals. The three Chinese universities mentioned above, in addition to the Huazhong University of Science and Technology and Peking Union Medical College, were all collaborators on this paper.
United States
Over a quarter of the global research papers into COVID-19 were published with involvement from American institutions. Given half of the top 10 universities in our medicine subject ranking were based in the US, this is hardly surprising. In fact, those five medical schools – Harvard, Stanford, Johns Hopkins, UCLA and Yale – account for 20 percent of all COVID-19 papers in the world.
Other notable universities to have collaborated on highly cited COVID-19 research papers are Princeton University and the University of Washington.