{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/presentation/3/context.json","id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/iiif/gq6qz24c85/manifest","type":"Manifest","label":{"en":["Dr. Robert Price"]},"logo":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/organizations/logo_images/000/000/246/original/CenterForHistoryFamilyMedicine_2c_RGB.png?1773344256","metadata":[{"label":{"en":["Rights Statement"]},"value":{"en":["\u003cp\u003eThis item is protected by U.S. copyright and related rights. It is being made available by the Center for the History of Family Medicine as its rights-holder for noncommercial use, including sharing and adapting the work. No permission is required for noncommercial use so long as attribution is provided. All other uses require permission from the Center for the History of Family Medicine.  Disclaimer:  The views presented in this broadcast are the speaker’s own and do not represent those of CHFM or the AAFP Foundation. The information presented is for general, educational, or entertainment purposes and should not be considered legal, health, financial, or other advice. \u003c/p\u003e"]}},{"label":{"en":["Date"]},"value":{"en":["2009-06-29 (created)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Type"]},"value":{"en":["Oral History"]}},{"label":{"en":["Agent"]},"value":{"en":["Dr. Steven Brown (Interviewer)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Format"]},"value":{"en":["audio file"]}},{"label":{"en":["Keyword"]},"value":{"en":["American Academy of Family Physicians","family medicine","family physician"]}},{"label":{"en":["Subject"]},"value":{"en":["Robert A. Price, MD (personal name)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Language"]},"value":{"en":["English (primary)"]}}],"requiredStatement":{"label":{"en":["Attribution"]},"value":{"en":["\u003cp\u003eThis item is protected by U.S. copyright and related rights. It is being made available by the Center for the History of Family Medicine as its rights-holder for noncommercial use, including sharing and adapting the work. No permission is required for noncommercial use so long as attribution is provided. All other uses require permission from the Center for the History of Family Medicine. \u0026nbsp;Disclaimer: \u0026nbsp;The views presented in this broadcast are the speaker\u0026rsquo;s own and do not represent those of CHFM or the AAFP Foundation. The information presented is for general, educational, or entertainment purposes and should not be considered legal, health, financial, or other advice.\u0026nbsp;\u003c/p\u003e"]}},"provider":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/aboutus","type":"Agent","label":{"en":["Center for the History of Family Medicine"]},"homepage":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/","type":"Text","label":{"en":["Center for the History of Family Medicine"]},"format":"text/html"}],"logo":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/organizations/logo_images/000/000/246/original/CenterForHistoryFamilyMedicine_2c_RGB.png?1773344256","type":"Image"}]}],"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/public/images/audio-default.png","type":"Image","format":"image/png"}],"items":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282865","type":"Canvas","label":{"en":["Media File 1 of 2 - Price_Robert_09_a.wav"]},"duration":1732.67502,"width":640,"height":360,"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/public/images/audio-default.png","type":"Image","format":"image/png"}],"items":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282865/content/1","type":"AnnotationPage","items":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282865/content/1/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"painting","body":{"id":"https://aviary-p-centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.s3.wasabisys.com/collection_resource_files/resource_files/000/282/865/original/Price_Robert_09_a.wav?1752680203","type":"Audio","format":"audio/wav","duration":1732.67502,"width":640,"height":360},"target":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282865","metadata":[]}]}],"annotations":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282865/transcript/81715","type":"AnnotationPage","label":{"en":["Dr. Robert Price interview transcript [Transcript]"]},"items":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282865/transcript/81715/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"This is Dr. Steven Brown on June 29, 2009 at the Freedom Inn in  interviewing Dr. Robert A. Price, MD.\n\nTAPE 1 - SIDE A\n\nI found several documents, one which you wrote about the starting of the residency which will probably look familiar, as well as the Center already had some information about you like a bio, and so this gave me a pretty good outline of kind of where you were born and where you trained and all that kind of stuff so you may not have to rehash too many of those details...\n\nWhatever you’d like.\n\nOK. So I’m just going to sort of start at the beginning but feel free to chime in with anything that you think is important along the way.  \n\nOK.\n\nI’ll make some notes just so I can keep track of where we are and everything.  \n\nDr. Price, when in your life did you decide to be a doctor?\n\nSophomore in high school, , biology class, that was it.\n\nWhat was it about that experience that made you decide to be a doctor?\n\nI can’t recall, but I enjoyed the scientific subjects that were presented in that biology class and I wanted to stay with it, so I did.\n\nDid you know that that’s now the medical school?\n\nYes.\n\nAre there any important experiences from your youth in particular that you would like to share, say before you went to medical school and all that kind of thing?\n\nWell, I went to , 2-year Jr. college here. That was about all there was.  was a Normal School for teachers at that time but I wasn’t connected with that at all. I don’t know what to tell you other than that I got acquainted with a couple of doctors who I didn’t think were well trained and as a result of that, why I was interested in helping to get general physicians trained so that they could better take care of their patients, so that’s what happened.  The Academy that was founded here in the state had its first annual scientific meeting in the town of  in the eastern part of the state. I think that was around 1952. We had two professors from the University of Utah School of Medicine come down and teach that class for two days, and it so affected me that I felt that all doctors should have the chance to participate in additional training. I had one associate a few years after that who had just come out of one of the colleges in the , never had an internship or residency; he just put up his shingle and started to practice. He was a real nice person but he didn’t know a lot of things about medicine. I felt that we needed more than that so I got involved in the Academy’s program of training.  Good Samaritan Hospital was the 15th hospital in the  that accepted this role of getting them started in more education.  The Academy, I don’t know who was the president of it at that time, but the academy got together with some of these schools that wanted to train doctors better, and as a result of that I stuck with it and was on the Board of Trustees, and did the things that we thought were necessary to get the thing growing.\n\nBacking up just a little bit, after you came out of the military you started your own practice here in .\n\nRight.\n\nCan you tell me what your practice was like?\n\n \n\nLike now or then?\n\nWhat your practice was... you had your own private practice before you went to the residency and everything... what was that practice like?\n\nWell, it was a general practice that included surgery.  I had had a couple of years of general surgery residency so I realized that we needed more - that I needed more  and that the doctors practicing in AZ needed more. That’s why I was willing to participate in any way that I could to get that accomplished.\n\nHow much of your practice was surgery vs. what you would consider now to be more of what a family doctor does?\n\nIt was probably, if you take the surgery and obstetrics out, probably 50 or 60% of my practice was that and there wasn’t any place to get general training at that time. That’s what attracted me to the academy. It was a place where you could get more training.  As we developed that, why we not only got more training for ourselves but for our colleagues, and that’s the way it got started.\n\nHow did you end up being attracted to general practice as opposed to more just staying as the traditional surgeon?\n\nBecause I enjoyed obstetrics and pediatrics. It was just my personal preference. I didn’t want to do without them so when I started practice, I told the administrator of Good Samaritan Hospital what I wanted and what I thought I should be doing and I needed to get more training in those areas but it wasn’t possible then. There wasn’t any place to get it, but they were willing to cooperate with us. \n\nSo this two-day meeting you mentioned in Safford, that was sort of the first time in AZ that there was this general practice group...\n\nYes.\n\n... and that’s where you had the speakers come from outside maybe to give you a little additional training in kind of the general practice stuff.\n\nThat’s right.  In fact, as I remember, the two physicians from the Univ. of Utah School of Medicine were internists, general internists, and you had to do everything. If somebody came in your office with a crisis type of problem, you did everything, and so we just felt that there should be more training for anyone who, in a small town particularly, would just go out and start a practice, they would have some place to go to get more training and do a better job. So that’s where it came from.\n\nWhat was your recollection, so obviously there’s a big time frame between 1952 when you were general practitioners, what was your recollection of how that turned into the idea of family practice, family medicine?\n\nI had an associate come into my general practice and he had come from a medical school in the midwest and they were one of the hospitals that recognized the need for more training for general physicians, and so with his influence, it kind of gave us a little extra boost and so we did that and Good Sam then became the 15th hospital to do it. \n\nWhat was his name?  It’s okay to name names. This is for posterity.\n\nYou mean the head of the hospital?\n\nNo whoever it was, you said you had a colleague that came from the midwest that encouraged you...\n\nRight.  I have to admit that my memory isn’t good with names.\n\nThat’s fine.  If you remember a name just say it, if not it’s no big deal.\n\nThis fellow was a very fine physician and when I took over the program of this training, he had information but he didn’t want to teach, and so I utilized him as an assistant and as a helper to me and my desire to make things better in .\n\nRight.  Were you involved in the actual naming of the specialty and how they decided it was going to be family medicine, or how were you involved in that process?\n\nWell, the first name I believe was the  of General Practice. I believe it was something like that. \n\nYes, I think so.\n\nGeneral practice was the term that was developed.  One of the problems we had in getting it started had to do with \n\nthe AMA and the organizations that developed training programs in . When we, I was one of 10 or 15 physicians who were in this group, and when we presented those things at first they sort of laughed at us. But before long they reversed their situation and we established the American Board of Family Practice.  We changed the name two or three times.  But we were involved with that movement, and the hospital was very cooperative and gave us assistance financially and otherwise.  I’ve been active in their political situation and was on the Board of Trustees of the hospital and so I at least had the ear of the board and pushed them in the direction of more training and how could we do it.  All of these men on the board of trustees of Good Sam were strangers.  They were political people and they were financial people from the banks and things like that but I got acquainted with them and was able then to give them my point of view and they thought that the hospital ought to do those things so we did.  I was on the board for either 4 or 6 years. I guess I got off of it because I was no longer chief of the medical staff and was more interested in teaching or training than I was in running the organization.\n\nWhat was the residency like at the beginning?\n\nWell, we started out with 2 individuals who wanted to get more training for themselves so we took them into our regular office of our practice.  We took those two in and paid them a salary and got them to follow the instructions and as a result it was so popular that after the first year where upon we had two, we developed a program where we had four residents for several years and then it went to six or eight. I don’t remember. There’s a plaque over here on the wall that they gave me when I retired.\n\nOh my goodness.\n\nIt has the names of all of the residents that I had a hand in training. \n\nWow.\n\nRight now we have, for example, there is a prominent office here in , close to us here in , where we have five physicians in this office and they were all trained at Good Sam by our Family Practice and they done very well.  They are so busy they just can’t get everything done they’d like to.  \n\nWhat were the main challenges when you were starting the residency at Good Sam?\n\nWell, we had to sell administration on what the , that’s what it was called then, was wanting to establish.  We had to sell the need for this sort of thing and arrange the financing.  On the Board we had the president of the biggest bank in  and others also in the banking business.  We got them convinced that we needed more training for our doctors, and that it would help them and their lives as well. \n\nWhat would you say to them about Family Medicine or General Practice at the time that was able to convince them?\n\nOnly that we all had had cases of family members or friends who had been faced with difficulties in getting medical attention.  We tried to show them that we needed more well trained physicians who could take care of the routine problems that we have, and as a result I guess we sold them on it because they helped us finance the hospital going into this.\n\nWhat was medicine like in general around that time?  What was the practice of medicine like? \n\nWell, my wasn’t quite the same as other doctors in the community.  I was doing everything. I had a year and a half of training in general surgery. Not enough but that’s all that was available as the war terminated, ... lost my train of thought. \n\nWhat was medicine like? You said your practice was different from most practices.\n\nOh, I was the only one who did a full practice with general surgery involved, and internal medicine, and pediatrics and obstetrics. I was doing all of those things. It was driving me crazy I was so busy but it was alright.\n\nDid there tend to be more doctors that were specialists?\n\nAbsolutely.  There were primarily general surgeons but also general internists. But there wasn’t anybody who was doing what I was doing with general practice, pediatrics, obstetrics, surgery and such.  I knew that I was well enough practiced to do all those things.  _   (couldn’t understand)____ the capability or the challenges had to be met. \n\nSo you saw a real need and you were able to convince the higher ups at Good Sam of that need also?\n\nYes.  You have to remember that I’ve been retired since 1994 so I’m not as familiar with things since that time.\n\nRight.\n\nI’ve kept in touch primarily because of people like Jeff Wolfrey. He was one of our residents and he took over my job after Don Mulvaney couldn’t do it any more and ...(couldn’t understand) .... Howard Silverman.  They couldn’t stay with it or didn’t want to just do that, and so we had to do something or do nothing and we didn’t want to do nothing.  (not sure if the “we” in this last sentence)\n\nFrom the early years or any point along in your directing what would you consider to be the strength of the Good Sam residency?\n\nWe had always pointed out the necessity of more training and some of the doctors who had been in practice went back in to get more training.  \n\nSo some of the residents had already been in practice but they would come back to do residency?\n\nYes, but in general they came from the medical schools and the medical schools that were old (?) like Good Sam had been, they were very prominent at that time.\n\nWhat were some major changes that you made in the program in your 20 years as directing?  What were the major changes that happened in family medicine or in the program?\n\nThe thing that surprised me most and which did happen was the residents that came in to our program when we were taking 8 residents a year and stayed for 3 years, most of them that came in didn’t want to do surgery.  I did tonsillectomies and hemorrhoidectomies and hernia repairs; things like that but they didn’t want to do it. I found out that they didn’t have that desire. And if they didn’t have it, they weren’t going to learn that kind of skill, so I gradually stopped teaching surgery except for the simple skin surgery type of things. We had to make that change because we can’t make a physician practice the way you practice. He’s going to practice the way he wants to practice or she wants to practice. Nowadays we get lots of women who are doing this. So I think about the only training your getting now in the surgical field are skin excisions and minor toe nail cases and things like that. \n\nRight.\n\nThey don’t want to do those more major surgeries and so we stopped teaching it.  We didn’t have them do that. I even stopped taking those cases and sent them to other specialists that did surgery. \n\nBut in the beginning you were still teaching residents to do, like you said, hernias, tonsillectomies?\n\nYes.\n\nAbout how many years would you say you continued to do that?  \n\nProbably five. Something like that.\n\nAnd would some of the graduates go on and then get hospital privileges and continue to do those surgeries? \n\nI really can’t give you an answer on that. I don’t know how they all turned out.  But in general I don’t think that when they went into a community to practice and open their office, I don’t think that they were advertising or trying to do surgical things except if they were the only doctor in town and trauma cases would come in and they’d have to do it because there wasn’t anybody else to do it.  \n\n\nEND OF TAPE 1 - SIDE A\n\n\n\nTAPE 1 - SIDE B\n\nSo besides the move away from surgery, were there any other changes that you noticed in family medicine or in the residency in your tenure as director?\n\nWell, we tried to give them every kind of experience that they would face as a general physician when they got into practice.  For example, we had a 1 or 2 month rotation in the .  They had nobody up there except one doctor who was not sufficiently trained and who wanted some help.  So we’d rotate our residents through them. We also rotated them through , the  in the Hawaiian group.  It is an agricultural island and they needed physicians, and going to  appealed to the residents so we gave them that wanted it a chance to really get out in the world and have nobody but themselves to take care of things. They don’t do that anymore.  I don’t know exactly when that changed but we used to give every graduate a chance to experience practicing in a smaller community where they were the doctor.  If we found somebody who didn’t like or wasn’t doing a good job in that particular specialty or field, we would pull them and let them do something else.  But most of them liked the locations.  They were pleasant and they were the doctor. When some body got hurt why they’d take care of that. When somebody had a cough they couldn’t control over time, why they had to take care of that. So that’s what we did and I don’t know what’s happened to it in the last 15 to 20 years.\n\nWell, we still have a required rural rotation. It’s still required. I don’t think they let us do the, you know, “you be the only doctor” anymore.  You have to have someone supervising you.  \n\nThat’s the way it should be.\n\nYes, but we still require it and actually one of our residents just went to the . So that hasn’t gone away.\n\nThat’s fine.  It just gives them the experience of this is the way it is, this is what it’s going to be and if you don’t like it you better make some changes now.  Some of them, after they got through with their residency, they’d only do general medicine cases. They wouldn’t take any obstetrics or pediatrics.  But that’s okay as long as there were other doctors who could do those cases it’s alright but at least the ones that wanted to and were practicing in a rural place. Some of them would go with a qualified physician who was their associate and they would do the things that he was doing or she was doing that were in keeping with what they had learned. \n\nRight. What were the greatest challenges of being a residency director?\n\nWell, a lot of residencies as they were developing were unable to get a sufficient number of residents to fill the slots that they had. I don’t think that Good Sam ever had one. To get 8 residents we would sometimes have to go up to 30 or 40 who had been interviewed but usually we would get them in the first dozen or fifteen because we had a good program or they wanted to live in  or whatever. So that was one of the challenges - we had to make it attractive enough so that we would get the top people.   I talked with Jeff Wolfrey in the last year or two and that would be what he was worrying about but then he’d come back and say, “oh, we got all the ones that we want.”\n\nYes.  We’ve had some very good years recently. Very good.\n\nThat’s what we hoped would continue and I’m glad to hear it is.\n\nYes.  I read somewhere that you were involved in starting the other  family medicine residencies also. Tell me about that.\n\nWell, the only way I was involved was that we had a regular meeting with the man in  and the one that was doing St. Joe’s and the one that was doing Phoenix Baptist.  The ones that were directing and I would meet together frequently and discuss certain types of problems that residencies have and that’s what we did. Several of those people were our trainees and they were doing other hospital work, we thought doing it well but if we could help each other we did.\n\nYes, and they still have that to this day, the residency directors getting together, I think it’s quarterly or something like that.\n\nWell, that’s good.\n\nYes. I also read that you were involved, when you were at the Maricopa Medical Society, with starting the medical school in . Tell me about that.\n\nWell, I was on the faculty of the medical school based in Tucson and we didn’t have enough teaching possibilities for trainings we wanted to get into so we would get one or two residents from the University of Arizona residency and we would try to help them like we did our own people and we did have several outstanding people come from that training program.  \n\nBut the medical school in  only started what in like the late 60s, right?\n\nIt was long after we had been teaching. For a few years they would send some of their residents to us. Sometimes we had one or two or maybe even four but at least two from the  that needed the kind of training that we were giving.  \n\nBut what about, but the medical school, wasn’t there a time when they were trying to decide even where the school was going to be?\n\nThat’s right.\n\nAnd how did they decide? They were trying to decide between  and  for where the medical school would be; how did they decide that?\n\nDr. Paul, a urologist, who was also a state senator and political, he and I went from one civic organization to another telling them the difference of the training they could get in  and compare with . They had very little teaching for family physicians, and so we got some of them who were on the faculty in Tucson to send their residents to us for 2 or 3 months or whatever the deal was, and as a result, we got to the point where they had an associate dean here in Phoenix who was on the faculty and associate dean of the Tucson school. She was a very fine physician, still is teaching I believe. I don’t recall all of the details or the needs but I do know that they needed more training and the school finally recognized that and they did more with it but I don’t know the details. \n\nHow long were you involved in kind of the leadership of family medicine and general practice, and what were your most memorial and most important experiences from that process? Sort of national leadership position.\n\nWell, because I had been active as some of my colleagues in other parts of the country were, because of that, I’m not sure just how it came about but I was elected to the board of trustees of the  of Family Physicians. That’s what they called it then. And with the others who also had that kind of a background, we worked together and worked things out and this foundation was one of the results of it. But we tried our best to build up the program.\n\nWas there ever a time whether you wondered whether family medicine was going to make it?\n\nNo. There were some faculty people from the various schools who poo-pooed the effort and didn’t think it was worthwhile and they said we’ll just do internal medicine and pediatrics and obstetrics and we won’t have to have this other specialty. But they didn’t ever win. We were able to show the other organizations, teaching organizations what we were doing and they could see that 3 more years after medical school, the kind of training we were prepared to give was the best way to go. So they supported our position and still do, I guess.\n\nDid family medicine turn out, from what you know now, did it turn out sort of how you expected it to turn out?  Are there any major differences between what you thought it should be and what it is today?\n\nI thought it would be more pediatrics and obstetrics because if you practiced in ,  for example, there was no other doctor there and if an  case came in that lived there, they’d have to do it, do something. Don’t know what else I can say.\n\nThat was the major difference.  What, over your career, what do you consider your greatest satisfaction to be? \n\nTo have a residency training program that turned out skilled physicians.  I was very pleased when we would graduate another group.  When I retired they gave me that plaque you saw on the wall and that’s really meant more to me personally than anything else connected with the program. _______________________ (unintelligible) I had a hand in training those people. Besides the graduates practicing in AZ, I can go to  and find half a dozen of our people there; I go to  and find six physicians there that were trained in our program, and other communities in the west have our graduates for __________________________________.\n\nYes. We’re almost up to 300 graduates now.\n\nIs that so?\n\n280-something or something like that.  That’s quite a legacy.\n\nWell, it is. When I was retiring from the teaching part and just directing the program in 1991 they gave me this, what do you call it?, pictures of all the people that I had worked with and trained with and taught with. ______________ I think Sandi __________________  There are a lot of people there that have been working with the residency for many, many years. \n\nRight.  What’s amazing to me about it is how it’s sort of exponential because you teach somebody and then they can go on teach somebody and then that person can go on and teach somebody so it keeps growing. \n\nThat’s right.\n\nWell that’s pretty much all my questions.  Is there anything else that you want to add. \n\nNothing I can think of at this time.  \n\nOkay. Do you mind if I just look through this book a little bit.\n\nNot at all.  I’m not sure if I prompted that but I think that someone wanted the graduates, if they had a desire or special need to find out what the training program had done for them at the time that they were now in their practice, and a lot of them would write in and tell us that.  But I hadn’t really paid much attention to that until I sold my house and found that album in there with a lot of ...\n\nYes, there’s like a script here from sort of jokes they told or something, huh?\n\n_____________________ (?)\n\nI’m just going to read what this says in the beginning.  It’s from September 13, 1991.  “Good Samaritan Family Practice Residency owes its very existence to Dr. Bob Price. He has guided us with love, wisdom and a few bad jokes in our journey to become family physicians. This residency is like family because of Bob and Dorothy Price. So to commemorate this family feeling, we, the 150 past and present residents put together this scrapbook.  The Prices have never forgotten a child’s name, a special interest, or important event in any of our lives.  We thank you both for all you’ve done.”  That’s very nice.    And they have the names of the graduates from the different years, and someone wrote a prescription for a peaceful and happy retirement.  The sig. is “One day at a time”. This is great.  \n\nThank you.  If you have a need for anything further that’s in there, you could take that album and use whatever you want or would like.  \n\nI’m wondering if I should make copies of it or something.  It’s amazing.  \n\nYou probably would have to get permission from each one of them.\n\nOh, okay.  This is fabulous.  They put their business cards in here and wrote some nice stories in here.  \n\nDifferent ones had different experiences and some of them might write about something that someone else never heard of.  \n\nRight.  Well, here’s a woman, Erin Hagen, who she says is a second generation Bob Price-trained family physician. So you taught her and her dad?\n\nI don’t think it was that.  \n\nOh, okay. Maybe her... Amazing.  You know I definitely will, I’d like to take a picture of your plaque or maybe I could ask your son to do that for me or something and email it to me.  This is very nice.  \n\nIt’s a heavy volume.\n\nYes.  Well, you obviously meant a lot to a lot of people over the years.  \n\n(Knock at the door) I’ll turn this off.  Thank you very much.\n\nThis is the end of the interview with Dr. Robert Price on June 29, 2009.  \n\n************************************************************************************","format":"text/plain"},"target":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282865#t=0.0,1732.67502"}]}]},{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282864","type":"Canvas","label":{"en":["Media File 2 of 2 - Price_Robert_09_b.wav"]},"duration":1426.65646,"width":640,"height":360,"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/public/images/audio-default.png","type":"Image","format":"image/png"}],"items":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282864/content/1","type":"AnnotationPage","items":[{"id":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282864/content/2/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"painting","body":{"id":"https://aviary-p-centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.s3.wasabisys.com/collection_resource_files/resource_files/000/282/864/original/Price_Robert_09_b.wav?1752680197","type":"Audio","format":"audio/wav","duration":1426.65646,"width":640,"height":360},"target":"https://centerforthehistoryoffamilymedicine.aviaryplatform.com/collections/2195/collection_resources/153754/file/282864","metadata":[]}]}],"annotations":[]}]}