340bemployed.org

Your Free Source for 340B News and Commentary

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Employers
  • Job Seekers
  • Advertise
  • 340B Health

Two 340B Program Advocates Honored at National Conference


 

Print Article

Sharley Chen and Derek Robertson

Sharley Chen and
Derek Robertson

July 27, 2009 – They came to 340B from different angles – he through a non-profit and she the federal government – but both had a profound and lasting impact on the drug discount program. On July 13, Derek Robertson, former executive director and founder of The Hemophilia Alliance, and Sharley Chen, former public health advisor and database administrator for the Office of Pharmacy Affairs, were recognized with life-time achievement awards at the Annual 340B Coalition Conference in Washington, D.C.

“In the beginning, there were only a few of us who had 340B programs and nobody liked us – manufacturers didn’t like us and the homecare companies didn’t like us,” recalled Patricia Dominic, executive director of Hemophilia of Georgia, which created one of the nation’s first 340B-covered hemophilia treatment centers. “But we realized there were strengths in numbers, and Derek helped us see that big picture.”

Today, The Hemophilia Alliance represents 74 treatment centers that participate in the 340B program, serving thousands of patients with bleeding disorders. Under Robertson’s leadership, such providers became an intricate and important part of the pharmacy safety net that the 340B program supports.

Robertson left the Alliance last year to become vice president of regulatory affairs for Apogenics, a Pennsylvania-based health care industry consulting firm. “You don’t do the work to get recognized,” he said when receiving his plaque, “but it’s certainly nice to be recognized!”

Chen joined the Office of Pharmacy Affairs (OPA) in 2003 after spending three decades in various federal government positions. During the award ceremony she recalled how OPA Director Jim Mitchell one day happened to stop by her office, located next to a HRSA break room, and started to chat with her about the challenges his agency faced.

The Office of Inspector General report had just found significant deficiencies with OPA’s database of covered entities and manufacturers, he told her. The report also found flaws in OPA’s price verification system. “Sharley and I talked and she agreed to be reassigned,” Mitchell said. “When the IG walked out, she walked in.”

Chen immediately rolled up her sleeves and went to work with a commitment and tenacity that would soon yield results. “Sharley pretty much on her own weeded out almost 4,000 bad records in a database of 10,000,” Mitchell recalled.

But Chen would not take full credit for improving the OPA database, the critical information center that manufactures and health care providers participating in the 340B program rely on to ensure that providers get proper discounts and manufacturers aren’t subject to duplicate discounts. “A lot of the changes were made because you let us know what the problems were,” she told the conference audience of mostly hospital, health center and industry representatives. “So if you find mistakes in that database, make sure to tell OPA, and they can fix it for you.”

Chen retired in January of this year, but says she remains open to “interesting projects” that may come her way.

Follow us on X

340B Health Follow

340B Health is the leading advocate & resource for hospitals that serve their communities by participating in the 340B drug pricing program. #Protect340B

340BHealth
340bhealth 340B Health @340bhealth ·
15 May

Drugmakers continue relaxing their contract pharmacy restrictions in states that prohibit such interference, enabling safety-net providers to offer more robust health care services and steeply discounted medications in at-need communities.

Let’s continue advocating until all 50…

Reply on Twitter 1922990848540880994 Retweet on Twitter 1922990848540880994 Like on Twitter 1922990848540880994 Twitter 1922990848540880994
340bhealth 340B Health @340bhealth ·
14 May

Do you know why certain medications are sometimes sold to #340B covered entities for as low as one penny?
It’s not because covered entities are gaming the system—it’s to put a check on pharmaceutical price increases. Those penny-priced drugs are the result of penalties Congress…

Reply on Twitter 1922677172184957109 Retweet on Twitter 1922677172184957109 Like on Twitter 1922677172184957109 Twitter 1922677172184957109
340bhealth 340B Health @340bhealth ·
13 May

We invited our President and CEO @MaureenTestoni onto #340BInsight for help understanding the litigation around #340B rebate models and potential federal regulatory shifts ahead for 340B. We also discuss how states are responding to the pharmaceutical industry’s efforts to shrink…

Reply on Twitter 1922322756617564612 Retweet on Twitter 1922322756617564612 Like on Twitter 1922322756617564612 Twitter 1922322756617564612
Load More

RSS 340B Informed

  • An In-Depth Look at Total 340B Purchases
  • Ideas for 340B Changes Could Lead to Legislation
  • Help From 340B After a Rare Diagnosis and an Unaffordable Bill

Copyright © 2025 · 340B Health