Learning health systems on the front lines to strengthen care against future pandemics and climate change: a rapid review.

Learning health systems on the front lines to strengthen care against future pandemics and climate change: a rapid review.

Publication date: Jul 22, 2024

An essential component of future-proofing health systems against future pandemics and climate change is strengthening the front lines of care: principally, emergency departments and primary care settings. To achieve this, these settings can adopt learning health system (LHS) principles, integrating data, evidence, and experience to continuously improve care delivery. This rapid review aimed to understand the ways in which LHS principles have been applied to primary care and emergency departments, the extent to which LHS approaches have been adopted in these key settings, and the factors that affect their adoption. Three academic databases (Embase, Scopus, and PubMed) were searched for full text articles reporting on LHSs in primary care and/or emergency departments published in the last five years. Articles were included if they had a primary focus on LHSs in primary care settings (general practice, allied health, multidisciplinary primary care, and community-based care) and/or emergency care settings. Data from included articles were catalogued and synthesised according to the modified Institute of Medicine’s five-component framework for LHSs (science and informatics, patient-clinician partnerships, incentives, continuous learning culture, and structure and governance). Thirty-seven articles were included, 32 of which reported LHSs in primary care settings and seven of which reported LHSs in emergency departments. Science and informatics was the most commonly reported LHS component, followed closely by continuous learning culture and structure and governance. Most articles (nā€‰=ā€‰30) reported on LHSs that had been adopted, and many of the included articles (nā€‰=ā€‰17) were descriptive reports of LHS approaches. Developing LHSs at the front lines of care is essential for future-proofing against current and new threats to health system sustainability, such as pandemic- and climate change-induced events. Limited research has examined the application of LHS concepts to emergency care settings. Implementation science should be utilised to better understand the factors influencing adoption of LHS approaches on the front lines of care, so that all five LHS components can be progressed in these settings.

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Concepts Keywords
Future Climate Change
Informatics COVID-19
Pandemic Emergency department
Sustainability Emergency Service, Hospital
Therapy Humans
Implementation science
Learning care systems
Learning Health System
Learning health systems
Pandemics
Primary care
Primary Health Care
Review

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH emergency
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
drug DRUGBANK Methionine
disease VO efficiency
disease VO time
disease MESH COVID 19 pandemic
disease VO volume
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone
disease VO population
disease VO Equity
disease VO frequency
disease VO protocol
drug DRUGBANK Ilex paraguariensis leaf
drug DRUGBANK Methylergometrine
drug DRUGBANK Calusterone
disease IDO country
disease VO publication
disease IDO quality
disease IDO process
disease IDO intervention
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
drug DRUGBANK Activated charcoal
disease VO effective
drug DRUGBANK Tretamine
disease VO report
disease VO organization
drug DRUGBANK Rasagiline
disease MESH infection
disease VO effectiveness
disease VO Canada
disease MESH stroke
disease MESH tuberculosis
pathway KEGG Tuberculosis
disease MESH pneumonia

Original Article

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