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. 2021 Jul 22;6(2):e10287. doi: 10.1002/lrh2.10287

TABLE 1.

Frequency of occurrence of “LHS work” elements (n = 79 publications)

Body of work Primary element # Secondary element #
Organizational learning, innovation, and continuous quality improvement Quality improvement processes are standard practice 46 Continuous (or CQ) Improvement processes are used 16
Rapid (or Rapid‐Cycle) learning processes are used 10
Plan‐Do‐Study‐Act (PDSA) cycles are used 5
Learning is done according to particular principles, processes, practices, and/or models 33 Collaborative or team‐based learning 16
Systems science 8
The Learning Cycle proposed by Friedman 5
Collective “sensemaking” 2
Positive deviance 2
Triple‐loop learning (“learning how to learn”) 2
“Emergent learning” or learning in support of “emergent strategy” 0
Learning is driven/guided by specific goals 13 Equity 6
Improving the quality of care 4
Efficiency 3
Patient safety 2
Learning takes place throughout the organization 8

Translating knowledge and evidence into improved practices

Research is translated into practice 26 Research conducted within the organization is translated 7
Research findings from the literature are translated 2
The organization adopts or implements evidence‐based treatments 18
There is a reciprocal relationship between research and practice 17
The organization is systematic in its implementation processes 13 Interventions should be adapted or tailored to the specific context 6
Allows for learning and refinement in implementation 5
Systematically de‐implements practices that no longer serve the organization 3
Follows the principles of implementation science 3
Implements with fidelity 0
Building new knowledge and evidence The organization builds knowledge or evidence 54
The organization conducts “research” 28
The research conducted by the organization is practical or needs to balance practical with rigorous 26
Findings from the research are shared or disseminated 14 Internally 7
Externally 6
Research conducted by the organization answers questions that are directly relevant to the organization 11 Answers questions posed by clinicians (relevant to clinical practice) 5
Answers questions by organizational leaders (relevant to larger organizational goals) 1
Data are translated into information 6
Internal knowledge and external knowledge are integrated 5
The research conducted by the organization is rigorous 4
Analyzing clinical data Patient data are captured and organized into a system, which is then used for analysis (research, QI, or other forms of learning) 37
Clinical and/or informatics data are used in diagnosing and treating individual patients 34 Clinical decision support systems are in place 22
Personalized treatment (eg, using genomics data) 12
Precision medicine 7
Aggregated clinical data is shared between institutions 14 The clinical data systems of different institutions are networked 3
Clinical data are analyzed to develop research questions and design studies 3
Engaging clinicians, patients, and other stakeholders Patients and family members are actively engaged 40 … engaged in the learning process 18
… engaged in clinical decision making 13
Stakeholders (beyond researchers) are engaged in the learning process 37 Stakeholders from within the organization (beyond researchers) are engaged in the learning process 20
Community members or community‐based organizations are engaged 17 … engaged in the learning process 4
… engaged in improving the organization 0
Clinicians are actively engaged in research 7
Payors are engaged in the learning process 1

Note: Elements mentioned in at least 20 publications are highlighted in dark yellow. Elements mentioned in 10‐19 publications are highlighted in light yellow.