Conclusion

This report has explored the opportunities and challenges for developing learning health systems (LHSs) in the UK, and highlighted priority actions for policymakers and organisational and system leaders. These include the need for a clear narrative about LHSs and how they can help – to galvanise progress and help those working in health and care to understand how they can engage with this agenda – to which this report aims to contribute. They also include developing many aspects of digital, data and improvement capability as well as steps to foster a culture of learning and improvement at organisational or local system level. And they include actions to nurture learning communities, to bring together diverse perspectives and bridge the divide between research and service delivery, as well as mechanisms to share learning and expertise across LHSs.

In addition to our recommendations for action, a range of other important messages about LHSs have emerged from our research. First, LHSs are not a separate agenda from the day-to-day business of service delivery; on the contrary, they are powerful precisely because they align improvement work with the process of delivering services. Nor is the LHS agenda necessarily about catalysing an ever-increasing number of new improvement projects: learning and improvement are already happening in most provider organisations and, in many cases, LHS approaches can offer a more systematic way to undertake this existing work.

As our case studies illustrate, there are many different types of LHS. And while there are vocal advocates for particular models, in this report we have aimed to highlight what they all have in common and suggested that it is by focusing on these common activities and assets that progress on the LHS agenda can be made. This ‘disaggregated’ approach (focusing on the underpinning activities and assets) also appeals because developing good data analytics, patient engagement and quality improvement are all important objectives in their own right, beyond the role these things can play as components of a full LHS. Looking at things in this way can also help people identify the seeds of LHSs in their current practice. And for organisations, systems and communities that do want to develop full LHSs, the first steps will often be to build these component parts. LHSs are not ‘all or nothing’ in this respect and are as much about an ongoing journey as any particular destination. Nevertheless, it is ultimately only by bringing these components together that it is possible to capitalise on the dynamic improvement potential of a full LHS.

We have seen that the growth in the availability of data and the increasing sophistication of technologies such as artificial intelligence present very significant opportunities for creating new digital tools to support both service delivery and improvement – for example, by linking electronic health records with clinical decision support systems. But alongside the technical side of LHSs, our research also highlights the importance of the human side. LHSs are social phenomena, relying on diverse stakeholders coming together to identify problems, design solutions and help drive change. We heard that there are important opportunities for LHSs to bring data and quality improvement communities closer together, and to make sure there is greater involvement of patients and the public in improvement. But an important message from our stakeholder engagement is not to underestimate the effort and design work involved in creating or harnessing networks to support service improvement.

Finally, the report has also explored some of the opportunities for deploying LHSs. We heard that LHSs will have an important role to play over the coming years in supporting service transformation and driving change across multiple local providers. For example, in England there is a significant opportunity now to develop these capabilities within integrated care systems – as a way of supporting the implementation, adaptation and refinement of some of the new models of care that NHS England has identified as priorities.

Beyond this, LHSs also have a critical role to play in enabling locally led service change. Ultimately, giving providers the capability to diagnose and solve problems in a robust and systematic way will need to be part of any sustainable, long-term strategy to meet the challenges that health and care services currently face.

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