Communicating Uncertainty in Surgical Pathology Reports A Survey of Staff Physicians and Residents at an Academic Medical Center
In order to document perceptions of text comments appearing in surgical pathology reports, questionnaires were distributed to 4 groups of caregivers: university staff pathologists, resident pathologists, faculty clinicians (other than pathologists), and resident clinicians at a teaching hospital. Re...
Saved in:
Published in | Academic pathology Vol. 3; p. 2374289516659079 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Los Angeles, CA
SAGE Publications
01.01.2016
|
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
Cover
Loading…
Abstract | In order to document perceptions of text comments appearing in surgical pathology reports, questionnaires were distributed to 4 groups of caregivers: university staff pathologists, resident pathologists, faculty clinicians (other than pathologists), and resident clinicians at a teaching hospital. Results of this pilot study showed a wide degree of variability existed within each group of surgical pathology report users, with respect to percent confidence assigned to various phrases, commonly used to express diagnostic uncertainty, appearing often as free-text comments in surgical pathology reports. The unavailability of immunohistochemistry tests, or ambiguous immunohistochemistry test results, was especially problematic. With respect to modes of communication between the surgical pathology laboratory and its service users, clinicians indicated they preferred to use tumor boards/interdisciplinary conferences, face-to-face meetings, and phone calls to clarify their interpretations of a pathologist’s diagnoses, as compared with simply reading free-text comments. On the other hand, surgical pathologists rely heavily on their use of the comment portion of a surgical pathology report to clarify, modify, or expand on the diagnoses they render. The majority of clinicians stated that they “always” read the free-text comment portion of a surgical pathology report, whereas some acknowledged they do not always read it. Pathology residents had significantly less confidence in the ability of a free-text comment on a surgical pathology report to clarify a diagnosis (χ2 = 46.36, P < .0001). Pathology departments should consider standardizing definitions and weighting the words and phrases they use in their free-text comment sections of surgical pathology reports. |
---|---|
AbstractList | In order to document perceptions of text comments appearing in surgical pathology reports, questionnaires were distributed to 4 groups of caregivers: university staff pathologists, resident pathologists, faculty clinicians (other than pathologists), and resident clinicians at a teaching hospital. Results of this pilot study showed a wide degree of variability existed within each group of surgical pathology report users, with respect to percent confidence assigned to various phrases, commonly used to express diagnostic uncertainty, appearing often as free-text comments in surgical pathology reports. The unavailability of immunohistochemistry tests, or ambiguous immunohistochemistry test results, was especially problematic. With respect to modes of communication between the surgical pathology laboratory and its service users, clinicians indicated they preferred to use tumor boards/interdisciplinary conferences, face-to-face meetings, and phone calls to clarify their interpretations of a pathologist’s diagnoses, as compared with simply reading free-text comments. On the other hand, surgical pathologists rely heavily on their use of the comment portion of a surgical pathology report to clarify, modify, or expand on the diagnoses they render. The majority of clinicians stated that they “always” read the free-text comment portion of a surgical pathology report, whereas some acknowledged they do not always read it. Pathology residents had significantly less confidence in the ability of a free-text comment on a surgical pathology report to clarify a diagnosis (χ
2
= 46.36,
P
< .0001). Pathology departments should consider standardizing definitions and weighting the words and phrases they use in their free-text comment sections of surgical pathology reports. In order to document perceptions of text comments appearing in surgical pathology reports, questionnaires were distributed to 4 groups of caregivers: university staff pathologists, resident pathologists, faculty clinicians (other than pathologists), and resident clinicians at a teaching hospital. Results of this pilot study showed a wide degree of variability existed within each group of surgical pathology report users, with respect to percent confidence assigned to various phrases, commonly used to express diagnostic uncertainty, appearing often as free-text comments in surgical pathology reports. The unavailability of immunohistochemistry tests, or ambiguous immunohistochemistry test results, was especially problematic. With respect to modes of communication between the surgical pathology laboratory and its service users, clinicians indicated they preferred to use tumor boards/interdisciplinary conferences, face-to-face meetings, and phone calls to clarify their interpretations of a pathologist's diagnoses, as compared with simply reading free-text comments. On the other hand, surgical pathologists rely heavily on their use of the comment portion of a surgical pathology report to clarify, modify, or expand on the diagnoses they render. The majority of clinicians stated that they "always" read the free-text comment portion of a surgical pathology report, whereas some acknowledged they do not always read it. Pathology residents had significantly less confidence in the ability of a free-text comment on a surgical pathology report to clarify a diagnosis (χ = 46.36, < .0001). Pathology departments should consider standardizing definitions and weighting the words and phrases they use in their free-text comment sections of surgical pathology reports. In order to document perceptions of text comments appearing in surgical pathology reports, questionnaires were distributed to 4 groups of caregivers: university staff pathologists, resident pathologists, faculty clinicians (other than pathologists), and resident clinicians at a teaching hospital. Results of this pilot study showed a wide degree of variability existed within each group of surgical pathology report users, with respect to percent confidence assigned to various phrases, commonly used to express diagnostic uncertainty, appearing often as free-text comments in surgical pathology reports. The unavailability of immunohistochemistry tests, or ambiguous immunohistochemistry test results, was especially problematic. With respect to modes of communication between the surgical pathology laboratory and its service users, clinicians indicated they preferred to use tumor boards/interdisciplinary conferences, face-to-face meetings, and phone calls to clarify their interpretations of a pathologist’s diagnoses, as compared with simply reading free-text comments. On the other hand, surgical pathologists rely heavily on their use of the comment portion of a surgical pathology report to clarify, modify, or expand on the diagnoses they render. The majority of clinicians stated that they “always” read the free-text comment portion of a surgical pathology report, whereas some acknowledged they do not always read it. Pathology residents had significantly less confidence in the ability of a free-text comment on a surgical pathology report to clarify a diagnosis (χ2 = 46.36, P < .0001). Pathology departments should consider standardizing definitions and weighting the words and phrases they use in their free-text comment sections of surgical pathology reports. |
Author | Bracamonte, Erika Krupinski, Elizabeth A. Klein, Robert Weinstein, Ronald S. Gibson, Blake A. |
AuthorAffiliation | 1 Department of Pathology, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson, AZ, USA 2 Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA |
AuthorAffiliation_xml | – sequence: 0 name: 1 Department of Pathology, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson, AZ, USA – sequence: 0 name: 2 Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Erika surname: Bracamonte fullname: Bracamonte, Erika – sequence: 2 givenname: Blake A. surname: Gibson fullname: Gibson, Blake A. – sequence: 3 givenname: Robert surname: Klein fullname: Klein, Robert – sequence: 4 givenname: Elizabeth A. surname: Krupinski fullname: Krupinski, Elizabeth A. – sequence: 5 givenname: Ronald S. surname: Weinstein fullname: Weinstein, Ronald S. email: rweinstein@telemedicine.arizona.edu |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28725774$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
BookMark | eNpdUctOwzAQtFARLaV3TihHLgHbibPxBQlVvKRKIKBny3Hc1FVih9hB6t-TqgUBp13NzM5od0_RyDqrETon-IoQgGuaQEpzzkiWMY6BH6HJDop32OhXP0Yz7zcYY5ICZBhO0JjmQBlAOkEwd03TW6NkMLaKllbpLkhjwzYyNnrru2qg6uhFhrWrXbWNXnXruuDP0PFK1l7PDnWKlvd37_PHePH88DS_XcRtgtMQ55RiDYqCLLmiK0JJka-oLhXmScnTQrGCZTIvMSuBggIseQKsUBlLNcUFS6boZu_b9kUzzGkbOlmLtjON7LbCSSP-MtasReU-BUs5cIwHg8uDQec-eu2DaIxXuq6l1a73gnBKCM0xpYP04nfWT8j3tQZBvBd4WWmxcX1nh90FwWL3EPH_IckXqeB8sQ |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | The Author(s) 2016 The Author(s) 2016 2016 SAGE Publications Inc. |
Copyright_xml | – notice: The Author(s) 2016 – notice: The Author(s) 2016 2016 SAGE Publications Inc. |
DBID | AFRWT NPM 7X8 5PM |
DOI | 10.1177/2374289516659079 |
DatabaseName | SAGE Open Access PubMed MEDLINE - Academic PubMed Central (Full Participant titles) |
DatabaseTitle | PubMed MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitleList | PubMed |
Database_xml | – sequence: 1 dbid: NPM name: PubMed url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed sourceTypes: Index Database – sequence: 2 dbid: AFRWT name: Sage Journals GOLD Open Access 2024 url: http://journals.sagepub.com/ sourceTypes: Publisher |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Medicine |
EISSN | 2374-2895 |
EndPage | 2374289516659079 |
ExternalDocumentID | 28725774 10.1177_2374289516659079 |
Genre | Journal Article |
GroupedDBID | .1- .FO 0SF 31X 5VS 7X7 8FI 8FJ AAXUO ABQXT ABUWG ACGFS ACROE ACSIQ ACUIR ADBBV ADVLN AEUHG AEUIJ AEWDL AEXQZ AFCOW AFCTW AFKRA AFKRG AFRHN AFRWT AIOMO AITUG AJUYK AJUZI AKRWK ALIPV ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS AMRAJ AOIJS BCNDV BDDNI BENPR CCPQU DV7 EBS EJD FDB FYUFA GROUPED_DOAJ GROUPED_SAGE_PREMIER_JOURNAL_COLLECTION HMCUK HYE J8X JCYGO K.F KQ8 M41 M~E O9- OK1 PIMPY ROL RPM SFC SFK SFT SGV SPP UKHRP Z5R AALRI AFJKZ BPHCQ BVXVI H13 NPM PQQKQ ZCN 7X8 5PM AASGM |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-p304t-8220e7c27ad9c2f121b8f2edc093d94bc5b56a8d05d727c70a9375bc654e20b53 |
IEDL.DBID | RPM |
ISSN | 2374-2895 |
IngestDate | Sun Dec 15 06:12:22 EST 2024 Wed Dec 04 09:27:03 EST 2024 Sat Sep 28 08:39:11 EDT 2024 Tue Jul 16 20:51:17 EDT 2024 |
IsDoiOpenAccess | true |
IsOpenAccess | true |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Keywords | surgical pathology reports diagnostic accuracy free-text comments quality measures medical errors human performance studies interobserver variability |
Language | English |
License | This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage). |
LinkModel | DirectLink |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-p304t-8220e7c27ad9c2f121b8f2edc093d94bc5b56a8d05d727c70a9375bc654e20b53 |
Notes | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
OpenAccessLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5497900/ |
PMID | 28725774 |
PQID | 1921128022 |
PQPubID | 23479 |
ParticipantIDs | pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_5497900 proquest_miscellaneous_1921128022 pubmed_primary_28725774 sage_journals_10_1177_2374289516659079 |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 2016-01-01 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2016-01-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 01 year: 2016 text: 2016-01-01 day: 01 |
PublicationDecade | 2010 |
PublicationPlace | Los Angeles, CA |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: Los Angeles, CA – name: United States – name: Sage CA: Los Angeles, CA |
PublicationTitle | Academic pathology |
PublicationTitleAlternate | Acad Pathol |
PublicationYear | 2016 |
Publisher | SAGE Publications |
Publisher_xml | – sequence: 0 name: SAGE Publications – name: SAGE Publications |
References | Krupinski, Graham, Bhattacharyya, Weinstein 2013; 44 Clinger, Hunter, Hillman 1988; 169 Kenney 1981; 305 Toogood 1980; 1 Christopher, Hotz 2004; 33 Domen 2016 Bastuji-Garin, Schaeffer, Wolkenstein 1998; 114 Powsner, Costa, Homer 2000; 124 Galloway, Taiyeb 2011; 656079 Antil 1983; 10 Krupinski, Tillack, Richter 2006; 37 Sobel, Pearson, Gross 1996; 3 Attanoos, Bull, Douglas-Jones, Fligelstone, Semararo 1996; 49 Lindley, Gillies, Hassell 2015; 210 Khorasani, Bates, Teeger, Rothschild, Adams, Selyzer 2003; 10 Tormala, Rucker 2007; 1 |
References_xml | – volume: 1 start-page: 469 year: 2007 end-page: 492 article-title: Attitude certainty: a review of past findings and emerging perspectives publication-title: Soc Personality Psych Compass contributor: fullname: Rucker – volume: 124 start-page: 1040 year: 2000 end-page: 1046 article-title: Clinicians are from Mars and pathologists are from Venus: clinician interpretation of pathology reports publication-title: Arch Pathol Lab Med contributor: fullname: Homer – volume: 10 start-page: 409 year: 1983 end-page: 415 article-title: Uses of response certainly in attitude measurement publication-title: Adv Consumer Res contributor: fullname: Antil – volume: 49 start-page: 79 year: 1996 end-page: 81 article-title: Phraseology in pathology reports. A comparative study of interpretation among pathologists and surgeons publication-title: J Clin Pathol contributor: fullname: Semararo – volume: 37 start-page: 1543 year: 2006 end-page: 1556 article-title: Eye-movement study and human performance using telepathlogy virtual slides. Implications for medical education and differences with experience publication-title: Hum Pathol contributor: fullname: Richter – volume: 1 start-page: 1094 year: 1980 article-title: What do we mean by “usually’? publication-title: Lancet contributor: fullname: Toogood – volume: 656079 start-page: 2011 year: 2011 article-title: The interpretation of phrases used to describe uncertainty in pathology reports publication-title: Pathol Res Int contributor: fullname: Taiyeb – volume: 169 start-page: 825 year: 1988 end-page: 826 article-title: Radiology reporting: attitudes of referring clinicians publication-title: Radiol contributor: fullname: Hillman – volume: 33 start-page: 84 year: 2004 end-page: 95 article-title: Cytologic diagnosis: expression of probability by clinical pathologists publication-title: Vet Clin Pathol contributor: fullname: Hotz – volume: 44 start-page: 357 year: 2013 end-page: 364 article-title: Characterizing the development of visual search expertise in pathology residents viewing whole slide images publication-title: Hum Pathol contributor: fullname: Weinstein – volume: 305 start-page: 1097 issue: 18 year: 1981 end-page: 109 article-title: Between never and always publication-title: N Engl J Med contributor: fullname: Kenney – volume: 10 start-page: 685 year: 2003 end-page: 688 article-title: Is terminology used effectively to convey diagnostic certainty in radiology reports? publication-title: Acad Radiol contributor: fullname: Selyzer – volume: 210 start-page: 628 year: 2015 end-page: 633 article-title: Communicating diagnostic uncertainty in surgical pathology reports: disparities between sender and receiver publication-title: Pathol Res Pract contributor: fullname: Hassell – start-page: 3 year: 2016 article-title: The ethics of ambiguity: rethinking the role and importance of uncertainty in medical education and practice publication-title: Acad Pathol contributor: fullname: Domen – volume: 3 start-page: 709 year: 1996 end-page: 717 article-title: Information content and clarity of radiologists’ reports for chest radiography publication-title: Acad Radiol contributor: fullname: Gross – volume: 114 start-page: 1551 year: 1998 end-page: 1555 article-title: Pulmonary embolism: lung scanning interpretation—about words publication-title: Chest contributor: fullname: Wolkenstein |
SSID | ssj0001477607 |
Score | 2.1238856 |
Snippet | In order to document perceptions of text comments appearing in surgical pathology reports, questionnaires were distributed to 4 groups of caregivers:... |
SourceID | pubmedcentral proquest pubmed sage |
SourceType | Open Access Repository Aggregation Database Index Database Publisher |
StartPage | 2374289516659079 |
SubjectTerms | Regular |
Subtitle | A Survey of Staff Physicians and Residents at an Academic Medical Center |
SummonAdditionalLinks | – databaseName: SAGE Open Access dbid: AFRWT link: http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV1LS8NAEB60BfEivo0vIoi32M1js8lJiliKUBFtsbewu9loD01Lmxz6753Nw7bWg7eQLMwyO5n55rkAt5JxEStFLBnywPIkYrggsR1LxomT4JOUQvcO91787sB7HtLhFqR1L0zFwfm9LqvCHRXKWv_dOhrdqpKMLcdFjy5AcOD7FL278CHPxlEZ7a4v1dBvdHo6H-vMttT1kAur7m7bhqbD0FA1oNnuvH30l1EZjzG_6LHWJCxNY5nb3CD7FyrdLK5cqRArjFZnH_YqtGm2S_E4gC2VHsJOr8qnHwFb6Q9JP80BSkBRIZAtzFFqvuezQi-arzwrlOTCLPH6_BgGnaf-Y9eqrlKwpi7xMgthAFFMOozHoXTwMGwRJA5ukoRuHHpCUkF9HsSExghoJCMcYQsV0qeecoig7gk00kmqzsAMXCIQd2jHA9GeL8I4CWzlJ5ITyqUQBtzUTIlQVHX-gadqks8jPXoNzSGiBgNOSyZF03KmRoSOGyoP5hnA1tj3s0CPwV7_ko6-inHY6OGykBAD7jSjo1qCIruaZP771M7_u_ACdhEeVQGXS2hks1xdIQTJxHUlN98NB9ip priority: 102 providerName: SAGE Publications |
Title | Communicating Uncertainty in Surgical Pathology Reports |
URI | https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2374289516659079 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28725774 https://search.proquest.com/docview/1921128022 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC5497900 |
Volume | 3 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1Na8JAEB3UQuml9LvpR0ih9BZdk2w2OdqiSEERq9Rb2N1sWqFG0Xjw33eyxlbrracEEtjlzWTnvZ3ZCcCjZFzEShFbhjywPYkcLkjqji3jxEnwTkqRnx3udP320Hsd0VEJ6OYsjC7al2JcTb8m1XT8qWsrZxNZ29SJ1XqdF9Q0LCSkVoYyht8tia43VjzGfMJ-U5I1x0X9FyCV8H2KWjBvFIo6AX01r_Lb55X75ZFbNV467LRO4Ljgi1ZjPa9TKKn0DA47RUb8HNjWCY_0wxqiDXWOP1tZ49R6W871ymb1eKaXuZW1ZtyLCxi2moOXtl38DMGeucTLbAzkRDHpMB6H0kE46yJIHJwkCd049ISkgvo8iAmNERPJCEfiQYX0qaccIqh7CZV0mqprsAKXCGQOuXRAvuaLME6CuvITyQnlUggDHjagROhseQaBp2q6XER58zQMaBj3DbhagxTN1l0xog2kBrAd-H5eyBtZ7z5B--qG1oU9DXjKgY6KrwiHK3qR_zXgzb-HuIUjZDzFHsodVLL5Ut0jq8iEib40YiYcNFr99wFen5vdXt_UGt3UHvYN2IzRiA |
link.rule.ids | 230,314,727,780,784,864,885,21966,27853,27924,27925,31720,33745,44945,45333,53791,53793 |
linkProvider | National Library of Medicine |
linkToHtml | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjZ1LT8MwDIAt2CTggnhTnkVC3ArpI017nBDTgG1CsIndqiRNYZdu2rrD_j1O270YB26VmlSR7Tqf48QBuJWMi1gpYsmQB5YnkeGCxHYsGSdOgk9SCn12uNX2G13vpUd7S1d9lRIc3-ttVTii3FnP_27GHhwXg7kAucD3KQZ24SZUPUQWNPFqrf7-2VkssHiM-flxad3F0n0Wacq1z_wFmOv7JJc2e-XzT30PdktwNGuFpvdhQ6UHsNUqU-OHwJaOeqRfZheVmSf7s6nZT82PySh3ceYbz3J_NzUL9B4fQbf-1HlsWOWtCNbQJV5m4YxOFJMO43EoHZSrLYLEwUGS0I1DT0gqqM-DmNAY2UQywpFAqJA-9ZRDBHWPoZIOUnUKZuASgQihYwgEN1-EcRLYyk8kJ5RLIQy4mQklQqvTqQSeqsFkHOkqajizIQAYcFIIKRoW5TEijMHQDzDPALYivnkDXdF69U3a_84rW2OwykJCDLjTgo5mxhDZZVHy31o7-2_Da9hudFrNqPncfj2HHaSech3lAirZaKIukSwycVXa0A9U78YL |
linkToPdf | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwjV3JTsMwEB1BkSouiJ2wBglxC7iJl_iIgKqsQtAKbpHtOMAlVDQ98PeME7MUOHCLFDuy3ozHbzxLAPaMUDq3lkRGqjSiBjlcWnTiyORFXOCTMdrVDl9d896Anj-wB5-b42phPIKjA5dWhSuqjbXb3cO8OPQxxsM4QYcuRW7AOUPnTk7DDKWSshbMHHVv7_tflyxUCF6XTLspkZvzFar89Zm_SObvXMlvCV_1GdSdhzlPHsOjRtoLMGXLRWhf-fD4Eohv5R7lYzhAgdYB_-otfC7Du_FrbebCG1XVNu8tbOj3aBkG3dP-cS_yf0aIhgmhVYSnOrHCxELl0sSIbUenRYyLJDLJJdWGacZVmhOWIz8xgihkIUwbzqiNiWbJCrTKl9KuQZgmRCONcH4EkjeuZV6kHcsLowhTRusAdj9AyVDzXDhBlfZlPMpcJzU83ZAEBLDagJQNmxYZGfphaAsEDUBMwPc5wHW1nnxTPj_V3a3RYRWSkAD2HdDZh0JkHd-Y_KfU1v87cAfaNyfd7PLs-mIDZpH4-KuUTWhVr2O7heSi0ttehd4BfEvHJA |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Communicating+Uncertainty+in+Surgical+Pathology+Reports%3A+A+Survey+of+Staff+Physicians+and+Residents+at+an+Academic+Medical+Center&rft.jtitle=Academic+pathology&rft.au=Bracamonte%2C+Erika&rft.au=Gibson%2C+Blake+A&rft.au=Klein%2C+Robert&rft.au=Krupinski%2C+Elizabeth+A&rft.date=2016-01-01&rft.issn=2374-2895&rft.eissn=2374-2895&rft.volume=3&rft.spage=2374289516659079&rft_id=info:doi/10.1177%2F2374289516659079&rft_id=info%3Apmid%2F28725774&rft.externalDocID=28725774 |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=2374-2895&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=2374-2895&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=2374-2895&client=summon |