Several contributions demonstrate how innovative participatory approaches can advance learning and transformation within LHSs. Aghabayli and colleagues (2025), describe a study codesigned, implemented, and disseminated by individuals with lived experience using the Patient and Community Engagement Research (PaCER) SET-COLLECT-REFLECT process (Aghabayli et al., 2025). Examining healthcare navigation programs, the study centres perspectives of both navigators and those being navigated. Identified challenges including limited training, inconsistent funding, communication gaps, and unmet mental health needs and highlight opportunities for system-level improvements, particularly in addressing complexity and equity-related barriers within Alberta's LHS.Focusing on sustainability and scale, Shahid and colleagues (2025) present a mission-driven approach to patient-oriented commercialization (Shahid et al., 2025). Through extensive codesign with patients and families, the authors developed and evaluated a family-integrated care model for neonatal intensive care units (FICare, now Merge™). Recognizing that traditional research funding was insufficient for long-term sustainment, a social enterprise model was adopted to ethically commercialize the intervention. This approach prioritized transparency, reinvestment, and stewardship, illustrating commercialization as a viable, though complex, pathway for sustaining POR informed innovations in LHSs.Participatory design methods are further explored by Lin and colleagues (2025), who describe the use of storytelling and a Design Jam within a large health authority in British Columbia to co-develop a vision for a community-centred LHS (Lin et al., 2025). Across two sessions involving multidisciplinary stakeholders, these methods supported idea generation, convergence, and collective sense-making, resulting in actionable strategies to strengthen community involvement. The authors offer practical recommendations to enhance participation, foster equity, and embed community responsiveness in LHS transformation efforts.LHS Infrastructure to Advance POR Beyond methods, several articles emphasize the role of infrastructure and governance in sustaining POR within LHSs. Giacomantonio and colleagues (2025) present a narrative review of engagement activities across existing and emerging LHSs, identifying 192 distinct activities involving patients, caregivers, communities, and the public (Giacomantonio et al., 2025). While the review highlights a lack of detailed reporting on engagement practices, it demonstrates considerable diversity in theoretical perspectives, timing, and contributor roles, underscoring multiple pathways for institutionalizing POR.At a national level, Alhuseini et al. (2025) illustrate how a government-mandated patient experience survey has been leveraged for system monitoring and improvement in Saudi Arabia (Alhuseini et al., 2025). Capturing patient experiences across multiple care domains, the survey has informed targeted initiatives to enhance professional skills through training and education, demonstrating how patient feedback can function as a core learning mechanism within an LHS. Mork et al. (2025) examine a provincial, integrated LHS that has embedded patient engagement and POR across planning, co-design, implementation, and decision-making (Mork et al., 2025). Key enablers include provincial networks, executive sponsorship, and an integrated electronic medical record. Persistent challenges remain, particularly in advancing equity, diversity, and inclusion and sustaining engagement during periods of significant organizational change.Complementing these system-level perspectives, Wilson and colleagues (2025) reflect on the co-development of a validated parent experience measure in neonatal intensive care units (Wilson et al., 2025). Their findings highlight the importance of governance, reflexivity, adaptive workflows, and constructive approaches to dissent. Reciprocity and long-term partnership emerge as central to sustaining POR within LHSs.Engaging marginalized, equity-deserving, and underserved populations remains a critical challenge for POR and LHSs. Several studies in this Topic explicitly centre these groups, demonstrating how inclusive approaches can enhance relevance, equity, and system learning. Naqvi and colleagues (2025) use a James Lind Alliance approach to prioritize research uncertainties related to mental health among immigrant populations (Naqvi et al., 2025). By engaging immigrant youth as research partners, the study identifies culturally specific experiences and structural barriers, including language, stigma, and limited awareness of resources. These findings illustrate how POR can inform more responsive and adaptive LHSs.Addressing another underrepresented population, Nagra and colleagues (2025) focus on injured workers experiencing delays in return to work (RTW) (Nagra et al., 2025). The authors argue that POR approaches can better align RTW programs with workers lived experiences, improve coordination across service providers, and enhance the effectiveness and durability of RTW initiatives.Hecker and colleagues (2025) examine person-centred and integrated care among individuals living with chronic kidney disease using the Rainbow Model of Integrated Care Measurement tool (Hecker et al., 2025). Comparing perspectives of patients, providers, and caregivers, the study underscores the importance of including caregivers-often underrepresented in POR-to strengthen integrated care and outcomes.Finally, Kemp and colleagues (2025) explore the experiences of adults who leave hospital against medical advice (LAMA) through co-designed patient-centred quality indicators (Kemp et al., 2025). LAMA patients report consistently poorer experiences across multiple dimensions of care and are more likely to belong to marginalized groups. The findings highlight the need for respectful, flexible, and empathetic strategies to reduce the frequency and adverse outcomes of LAMA dischargesTaken together, the contributions to this Research Topic demonstrate that embedding POR within LHSs produces meaningful outcomes for system learning, performance, and equity, while also revealing ongoing implementation challenges. Across diverse contexts, POR enhances the relevance and usability of evidence, strengthens feedback loops, and supports more adaptive and legitimate decision-making.Critically, the studies show that impact depends on moving beyond episodic engagement toward sustained partnerships supported by governance, resources, and accountability. Innovative methods, enabling infrastructures, and inclusive approaches, particularly those centring marginalized and equity-deserving populations, emerge as key levers for translating POR into improved health system outcomes. Collectively, these contributions advance the evidence base for building LHSs that learn with, and from, the people they serve, aligning closely with the mission to promote impactful, open, and patient-centred health research.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Manhas et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a285aa0a974eb0d3c00a5c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/frhs.2026.1789698
Kiran Pohar Manhas
Alberta Health Services
Karen Benzies
University of Calgary
M. Santana
University of Calgary
Frontiers in Health Services
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
University of Alberta
University of Calgary
Health Canada
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: