TY - JOUR T1 - To Care Is to Coprovide JF - The Annals of Family Medicine JO - Ann Fam Med SP - 553 LP - 555 DO - 10.1370/afm.342 VL - 3 IS - 6 AU - Stephen A. Buetow Y1 - 2005/11/01 UR - http://www.annfammed.org/content/3/6/553.abstract N2 - Although primary care, including family medicine, recognizes different types of clinician-patient interaction, I argue that only interactions characterized by coprovision define care. By coprovision I mean that clinicians and patients each provide the expertise in health care that they have the capacity to contribute in any given situation. I argue that paternalism and consumerism cannot signify care in any real sense. Some implications of this analysis include a reconceptualization of family medicine and its defining attributes; support for features of caring relationships, such as mutual responsiveness and responsibility; and an acknowledgment that clinicians and patients need to be self-regarding as well as other-regarding. In a previous issue of the Annals, I called for a new dictionary for family medicine, one that would redefine attributes of family medicine in ways not exclusively clinician-centric. Specifically, it would acknowledge the role of patients and their informal caregivers as coproviding, not merely consuming, health care. ER -