Submit to the Journal of Surgery Proceedings
We invite high-impact manuscripts in minimally invasive, laparoscopic, endoscopic, and robotic surgery that improve operative safety, outcomes, and implementation quality.
Research Themes We Prioritize
Editorial focus is on methodological strength, reproducibility, and translational surgical value.
Journal of Surgery Proceedings welcomes original clinical and translational studies that advance modern procedural practice. Priority areas include laparoscopic surgery, robotic-assisted surgery, thoracoscopic interventions, gastrointestinal and hepatobiliary procedures, trauma and emergency surgery pathways, perioperative optimization, and surgical outcomes science.
We also encourage work in surgical education, competency assessment, simulation, workflow engineering, digital operating room tools, and quality-improvement frameworks that can be implemented at scale. Manuscripts with strong real-world applicability and measurable patient impact are highly valued.
Evidence synthesis articles, multicenter cohort analyses, implementation studies, and pragmatic protocol reports are welcome when they provide rigorous methods and clear interpretation boundaries. Submissions should explicitly connect findings to operative decision-making, recovery pathways, or system-level performance.
How to Strengthen First-Round Decisions
Clear framing and evidence mapping improve reviewer confidence and reduce avoidable revisions.
Novelty Clarity
State what is genuinely new in your technique, endpoint, or implementation model.
Method Transparency
Provide design logic, endpoint definitions, confounder control, and reproducible analysis steps.
Clinical Translation
Explain who benefits and how findings can influence perioperative practice decisions.
Data Governance
Include complete ethics, conflicts, funding, and data availability declarations at submission.
Manuscripts that combine methodological rigor with implementation relevance perform best in first-round assessment and are easier to route to the right expert reviewers.
Accepted Manuscript Categories
Multiple article pathways are available for clinical, technical, and policy-oriented surgery scholarship.
We accept original research, systematic reviews, narrative reviews, case reports, case series, short communications, editorials, commentaries, and letters to the editor. Special issue proposals and themed collections are also encouraged where guest editorial oversight is credible and scope is clearly defined.
Authors should select the most appropriate article type and align structure accordingly. A mismatch between manuscript objectives and article category is a common source of delay. If uncertain, request pre-submission guidance with title, abstract, and design summary.
Submissions from interdisciplinary teams are strongly encouraged, including collaborations across surgery, anesthesiology, critical care, nursing, biomedical engineering, epidemiology, biostatistics, and health-policy analysis.
Practical Pre-Submission Checklist
A short control pass before upload can materially improve editorial and reviewer flow.
Confirm that title, abstract, and conclusion align on one contribution statement. Lock endpoint names across text, figures, and supplementary files. Ensure methods are reproducible, with complete instrumentation and analytic details.
Upload complete declarations: ethics approval, informed consent pathway, funding support, conflicts of interest, contributor roles, and data access conditions. Incomplete compliance documents often create avoidable administrative holds before peer review.
For surgical video assets, technical appendices, and protocol supplements, use stable naming and clear in-text references. Organized files reduce technical screening delays and improve reviewer navigation.
For scope-fit or submission support, contact [email protected] with manuscript type and short abstract. Early guidance can improve first-round decision quality and reduce revision cycles.
How to Increase Acceptance Readiness
Strong manuscripts pair surgical innovation with clear implementation relevance.
Authors should position manuscripts around one practical decision point: what changes for surgeons, perioperative teams, or health systems if these findings are adopted. Clear implementation impact statements help editors route papers to reviewers who can judge both technical quality and real-world value.
Competitive submissions usually present robust methods and disciplined interpretation boundaries. Overstated conclusions, unclear endpoint labels, and fragmented supplementary references remain common avoidable weaknesses. Before submission, run a control pass for terminology consistency and evidence mapping across tables, figures, and appendices.
Interdisciplinary studies are welcome when integration is explicit. If your manuscript combines surgical technique, outcomes analytics, and policy interpretation, explain how each layer contributes to the final conclusion. This reduces reviewer ambiguity and improves decision efficiency in first-round review.
For presubmission fit checks, send a concise synopsis to [email protected] with title, objective, design, and expected clinical audience. Early fit confirmation can significantly reduce administrative reclassification and improve workflow speed.
What Editors Look for First
Early editorial decisions are driven by fit, rigor, and relevance.
Editors prioritize submissions that state a clear surgical question, provide reproducible methods, and demonstrate practical impact for perioperative decision making. Manuscripts that combine novelty with disciplined interpretation are more likely to move quickly to high-quality external review. Before submission, confirm that your discussion section does not overstate causality beyond design limits and that all key outcomes are consistently labeled across manuscript assets.
Strong first submissions reduce revision cycles and improve final publication timelines.
Submission quality increases when authors state one clear implementation takeaway for surgeons, perioperative teams, or health-system planners. This practical signal improves editorial fit assessment and supports stronger reviewer assignment in first-round processing.
Authors who include implementation boundaries and realistic adoption context in the discussion are consistently easier to evaluate and route, resulting in faster and more stable editorial outcomes.
Send Your Paper to JKSP
Submit through the full manuscript workflow or use the simple submission route.
For support: [email protected]