Dr. Arthur Chen is a senior fellow at Asian Health Services an FQHC/community health center in Oakland, California—where he previously served as medical director and special programs director from 1984-1995. Since 1983, he continues practicing both inpatient and outpatient medicine as a family physician.
Since 2011 he has served as an advisor and professional coach for the National Leadership Academy for the Public’s Health—a CDC supported leadership development program for our emerging public health leaders, run from the Center for Health Leadership and Practice of the Public Health Institute. He also served on the health advisory board for Intelligent Insites in 2015—an operational intelligence company for health delivery systems. In 2017, Dr. Chen served as the chief medical and population health officer for Applied Research Works, a Health IT software company developing tools for case management, risk adjustment and improving quality of care performance among physician offices, medical groups and health plans.
He served a similar role for the California Opioid Safety Network that is addressing the statewide opioid crisis in 2018. He also currently serves as clinical advisor and sits on the board of directors for the National Council of API Physicians (NCAPIP) and the California Physicians Alliance (CaPA) an organization dedicated to universal health coverage and access for all Californians.
From 2011-2021, Dr. Chen sat on the Alameda County Oversight Committee for Measure A—which disperses $130+M annually for health services for low income residents. He served as the chief medical officer and medical director of the Alameda Alliance for Health for 8 years, a Medicaid Managed Care non-profit public entity serving low-income residents of Alameda County. From 1996-2001, he was the public health officer for Alameda County.
He has served as an emergency room physician and the associate medical director of the Institute of Emergency Medicine at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY. He was also the executive director of the Chinatown Health Clinic (Charles B. Wang Health Center) in New York City, NY.
He was appointed to the Advisory Committee on Minority Health—a national committee established to advise on health equity initiatives undertaken by the DHHS and the Office of Minority Health, during the Obama administration.
He chaired the board of directors of the Asian and Pacific Islander American Health Forum from 1998-2006, a national policy and advocacy organization whose mission is to improve the health status of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.
From 2012-2017 he served on the Board of Applied Research Works, a health IT software company. In 2001, he was appointed to the Task Force on Culturally and Linguistically Competent Physicians and Dentists for the CA Dept of Consumer Affairs for three years.
Between 1997-2001 he served on the National Association of County and City Health Officials MAPP (Mobilization for Action through Planning and Partnerships) planning committee (formerly APEXCPH: Assessment and Planning Excellence through Community Partners for Health.
From 1997-2001 he served as a board member and later an executive committee member of the California Conference of Local Health Officers. He also served on the board (2003-2012 and as Chairperson, 2006-2008) of The California Endowment, a health foundation focused on improving health status and access to care for California’s medically underserved population.
From 1999-2001 and again from 2004 to 2017, he served as an executive council member of the Alameda Contra Costa County Medical Association and as president in 2016. In 1999 he served on the CDC/ATSDR Task Force on Public Health Workforce Development.
Dr. Chen was the recipient of the 2008 California Medical Association Foundation’s Robert D. Sparks, MD Leadership Award. He was selected as a fellow to the 1996-7 Public Health Leadership Institute sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and the University of California. During l989-l992 he was a member of the Kellogg National Fellowship Program. He has also served on advisory and planning committees to the Bureau of Primary Health Care of the U.S. Public Health Service, the Office of Minority Health, the National Institutes of Health and the American Lung Association. He has also testified before Congress and President Clinton's Health Task Force.