Now, Price's future at the White House is uncertain. Trump has emphasized his displeasure over the HHS secretary's use of private jets, but demurred from announcing whether or not he would fire Price, telling reporters "we'll see."
But that didn't stop the president-elect from selecting him as HHS secretary in November. In July, the president joked that he would fire Price if the Republicans didn't pass a new healthcare bill.
During the 2016 Republican primaries, Price criticized Trump and said he voted for Sen. Marco Rubio.
He subsequently served in the House of Representatives from 2005 to 2017, representing the northern suburbs of Atlanta. He began pushing for an alternative to US President Barack Obama's Affordable Healthcare Act in 2009.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIn 1996, Price ran for Georgia's state Senate as a Republican and won. In 2002, he left private practice and became the medical director of Grady Memorial Hospital’s orthopedic clinic, described by the New York Times a "a vast, chaotic, aging complex, just a few blocks from the State Capitol."
As a result of his views, he became a member of the conservative nonprofit Association of American Physicians and Surgeons. One of the group's extreme stances is an opposition to mandatory vaccinations.
The New York Times reported Price felt frustrated with insurance companies and federal health regulators alike.
According to the New York Times, Price merged his practice Compass Orthopedics with several other Atlanta clinics to form Resurgens Orthopaedics, "the largest orthopedic practice in Georgia."
In 1984, Price went into private practice, opening an orthopedic clinic in Atlanta. He told Atlanta Trend he felt physicians in the city went through a "malpractice crisis" in the 1980s, prompting his interest in local politics. He began working with the Medical Association of Georgia early in his career.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAfter medical school, Price traveled to the state he would eventually represent in Congress. He moved to Roswell, Georgia, to complete his orthopedic surgery residency at Emory University's Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta.
He stuck around the University of Michigan for medical school as well. Following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, Price received his M.D. in 1979.
Price earned his bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan.
Price launched his political career in Georgia, but he grew up in Lansing, Michigan. Atlanta Trend reported that he worked as an EKG tech at a local hospital in high school.