About
Acceptance rate:
39%
Time to first decision with review (median):
73 days*
Time from acceptance to publication (median):
16 days*
Total content views:
2.30 million
Total Altmetric mentions:
9,078
Aims and Scope
BMJ Case Reports is an important educational resource offering a high volume of cases in all disciplines so that healthcare professionals, researchers and others can easily find clinically important information on common and rare conditions. All articles are peer reviewed and copy edited before publication. BMJ Case Reports is not an edition or supplement of the BMJ.
We want to publish cases worthy of discussion, particularly around aspects of differential diagnosis, decision making, management, clinical guidelines and pathology. The advantage is that we learn from real cases. An example of the kind of cases we want to publish can be found in our 10th anniversary special edition booklet.
BMJ Case Reports Fellowships
BMJ Case Reports has a unique business model whereby users (whether authors and/or readers) become Fellows. For further information visit our Fellowships page.
Editorial Board
To find out more about BMJ Case Reports Editor in Chief Seema Biswas and her editorial team, please refer to the Editorial Board page.
Ownership
BMJ Case Reports is owned by BMJ.
Journal information
Publication Model
Subscription with open access option
Frequency
Continuous
Launch date
2008
Indexed by
Web of Science Core Collection: Emerging Sources Citation Index, MEDLINE (Index Medicus), PubMed Central, Scopus, Embase (Excerpta Medica), Google Scholar
Peer Review Model
Single anonymised; the names of reviewers are hidden from the author
Online ISSN
1757-790X
Journal Statistics 2023
Acceptance rate: 39%
Speed
Time to first decision with review (median): 73 days
Time from acceptance to publication (median): 16 days
Impact
Impact factor: 0.6
Citescore: 1.4
Citescore rank: 292/636
Journal Citation Indicator: 0.2
SciMago Journal Rank (SJR): 0.235
Eigenfactor: 0.01424
Reach
Total content views: 2.30 million
Total Altmetric mentions: 9,078
The impact that academic research has cannot be defined by one single metric. In 2013, BMJ signed the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA). We did this to show our support for using multiple measures and metrics to portray journals’ impact; moving away from the Impact Factor as a single measure.
How we get these metrics
To advertise
Affiliations
BMJ is a founding member of COPE (the Committee on Publication Ethics), which provides a forum for publishers and Editors of scientific journals to discuss issues relating to the integrity of the work submitted to or published in their journals.