Lau, Robin S.Boesen, Mari E.Richer, LawrenceHill, Michael D.2024-07-212024-07-212024-07-17Health Research Policy and Systems. 2024 Jul 17;22(1):87https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-024-01168-whttps://hdl.handle.net/1880/119222https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/46818Abstract Measuring and optimizing a health system is challenging when patient care is split between many independent organizations. For example, patients receive care from their primary care provider, outpatient specialist clinics, hospitals, private providers and, in some instances, family members. These silos are maintained through different funding sources (or lack of funding) which incentivize siloed service delivery. A shift towards prioritizing patient outcomes and keeping the patient at the centre of care is emerging. However, competing philosophies on patient needs, how health is defined and how health is produced and funded is creating and engraining silos in the delivery of health services. Healthcare and health outcomes are produced through a series of activities conducted by diverse teams of health professionals working in concert. Health professionals are continually learning from each patient interaction; however, silos are barriers to information exchange, collaborative evidence generation and health system improvement. This paper presents a systems view of healthcare and provides a systems lens to approach current challenges in health systems. The first part of the paper provides a background on the current state and challenges to healthcare in Canada. The second part presents potential reasons for continued health system underperformance. The paper concludes with a system perspective for addressing these challenges.Siloed mentality, health system suboptimization and the healthcare symphony: a Canadian perspective2024-07-21enCrown