The enduring value of Prescription for Health is not the medical information that is conveyed, but rather the historical glimpse this program provides into the community’s health concerns at the time and the opportunity to see and hear hundreds of Tucson physicians responding to those concerns using a newly available medium—public access cable television.
Local physicians and other medical professionals were the expert guest speakers. Occasionally lay persons, such as patients or high school students, were also program guests. With only a few exceptions Ronald P. Spark MD was the program’s host and Constance “Connie” D. Wry was the producer for each of the 30-minute episodes.
Anatomical models and other props were sometimes used by guest speakers and occasionally the program left the studio and was shot on location in an operating room, in a patient's home or out-of-doors. While most episodes were in English, approximately two dozen were done in Spanish or bilingually in Spanish and English.
The 218 episodes made available via the Arizona Memory Project represent approximately 75% of the 284 known Prescription for Health episodes. For many of the other 66 episodes there is an extant tape, but the tape is in poor to very poor condition.
Videotapes of the Prescription for Health episodes were provided by the Pima County Medical Society, Access Tucson and by Ronald P. Spark MD. Tapes were digitized by AHSC Biomedical Communications. Metadata were compiled by Azul Gómez, Bruce Chandler and Lisa Aguilera. The editor of this digital collection is Dave Piper, Digital Resources and Special Collections Librarian, Arizona Health Sciences Library.