DOI: 10.65738/001c.163564 ISSN: 3069-8146

More Than a Provider: Reclaiming the Language of Relationship in Medicine

Anas Daghestani

The American College of Physicians recently issued guidance discouraging the use of the term “provider” when referring to physicians. At first glance, this may appear semantic—an exercise in professional preference rather than substance. It’s not. Language shapes identity, and identity shapes behavior. In medicine, both shape patient experience and, ultimately, quality and outcomes.

This concern is not exclusive to physicians. It extends equally to nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and all clinicians engaged in patient care. The issue is not hierarchy, it is orientation. When we default to “provider,” we risk flattening distinctions not of status, but of professional identity grounded in responsibility, continuity, and trust.

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