AMA Votes to Reject the Term 'Provider' for Physicians
The American Medical Association's House of Delegates voted this week at its Annual Meeting in Chicago to formally oppose use of the term "provider" when referring to physicians, according to Becker's Hospital Review.
The new policy extends existing AMA guidance that already asks healthcare organizations to specify the type of clinician involved in patient care, using each professional's recognized title rather than a generic catch-all. The AMA argues that lumping physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and others under one word obscures differences in training and licensure that matter to patients.
In practice, the vote is a signal rather than a mandate. The AMA cannot force hospitals, insurers, or electronic health record systems to drop the word, and "provider" remains deeply embedded in billing codes, contracts, and federal regulation. Still, the policy gives physician advocates leverage to push health systems and vendors toward more precise language in documentation, patient-facing materials, and staffing models.
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