# Learning Health Systems Symposium: Charting the Future of Saskatchewan Healthcare

**Authors:** Charlene Haver, Amir Reza Azizian, Christina Weise, Miranda Cary, Maggie King, Susan Shaw, Kyla Avis, Emiliana Bomfim, Beliz Açan Osman, Gary Groot

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/lrh2.70060 · Learning Health Systems · 2026-01-07

## TL;DR

This paper summarizes a symposium on learning health systems in Saskatchewan, focusing on improving healthcare through patient engagement and collaboration.

## Contribution

The paper presents key insights and next steps for building learning health systems in Saskatchewan through stakeholder collaboration.

## Key findings

- Strengthening partnerships with patients and communities is crucial for LHS development.
- Establishing a shared vision and harmonizing priorities are essential for successful LHS implementation.
- Collaboration among stakeholders is needed to build infrastructure and support LHSs.

## Abstract

This article shares insights from the Learning Health Systems Symposium, “Charting the Future of Saskatchewan Healthcare: Generating Value within our Health Systems.”

Patient Partners and over 100 professionals in the fields of research, healthcare, and policy joined the Saskatchewan Centre for Patient‐Oriented Research (SCPOR) in Regina, Saskatchewan Canada, for a day filled with knowledge about learning health systems (LHSs). Attendees provided key insights on how to build provincial capacity in LHSs and thereby improve the health of people in Saskatchewan.

Key insights from the symposium included strengthening meaningful partnerships with patients and the community; establishing a shared vision for LHSs; harmonizing conflicting priorities; removing silos; recognizing the natural tensions between academia and the healthcare system; and building on and aligning infrastructure to support LHSs development.

The LHSs symposium provided a way for health system leaders, Patient Partners, researchers, clinicians, and students to develop a common understanding of LHSs and envision a future for LHSs in Saskatchewan, Canada. Key next steps were to strengthen patient and community engagement, work collaboratively to establish a shared vision of LHSs, better understand existing assets to support LHSs, and identify opportunities to build future LHSs infrastructure.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

23 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819043/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819043