RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Harmonizing the Tripartite Mission in Academic Family Medicine: A Longitudinal Case Example JF The Annals of Family Medicine JO Ann Fam Med FD American Academy of Family Physicians SP 237 OP 243 DO 10.1370/afm.3108 VO 22 IS 3 A1 Peek, C. J. A1 Allen, Michele A1 Loth, Katie A. A1 Harper, Peter G. A1 Martin, Casey A1 Pacala, James T. A1 Buffington, Angela A1 Berge, Jerica M. YR 2024 UL http://www.annfammed.org/content/22/3/237.abstract AB Academic practices and departments are defined by a tripartite mission of care, education, and research, conceived as being mutually reinforcing. But in practice, academic faculty have often experienced these 3 missions as competing rather than complementary priorities. This siloed approach has interfered with innovation as a learning health system in which the tripartite missions reinforce each other in practical ways. This paper presents a longitudinal case example of harmonizing academic missions in a large family medicine department so that missions and people interact in mutually beneficial ways to create value for patients, learners, and faculty. We describe specific experiences, implementation, and examples of harmonizing missions as a feasible strategy and culture. “Harmonized” means that no one mission subordinates or drives out the others; each mission informs and strengthens the others (quickly in practice) while faculty experience the triparate mission as a coherent whole faculty job. Because an academic department is a complex system of work and relationships, concepts for leading a complex adaptive system were employed: (1) a “good enough” vision, (2) frequent and productive interactions, and (3) a few simple rules. These helped people harmonize their work without telling them exactly what to do, when, and how. Our goal here is to highlight concrete examples of harmonizing missions as a feasible operating method, suggesting ways it builds a foundation for a learning health system and potentially improving faculty well-being.