Jennifer Kawwass MD
Overview
Jennifer Fay Kawwass, MD
Professor, Division Director
Division of Reproductive Endocrinology & Infertility, Gynecology & Obstetrics, Emory University School of Medicine
Medical Director, Emory Reproductive Center
Research and Registry Committees, Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology
Ethics Committee and COVID19 Task Force, American Society of Reproductive Medicine
Guest Researcher, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Jennifer F. Kawwass, MD, joined the Emory Reproductive Center in August of 2014. She is a native of Virginia Beach, VA where she was valedictorian of her graduating class at Norfolk Academy. She then went on to play Division I Field Hockey at Davidson College in Davidson, NC where she graduated Phi Beta Kappa with a BS degree in Biology. She returned to her home state to complete medical school at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville where she received the Medical Alumni Association Outstanding Student Award. In 2007, she moved to Atlanta for her Ob/Gyn residency at Emory University during which time she received numerous teaching, surgical, and research awards and was elected by her faculty and peers as an Administrative Chief Resident. She chose to stay at Emory as a Fellow in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility and received awards for her thesis research project, which she completed in partnership with the CDC, where she remains a Guest Researcher. She is among a handful of physicians nationally who were chosen by the American Society of Reproductive Medicine to participate in the CREST Scholars Program. She is also involved at the national leadership level in both the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART), the national self-governing body for fertility physicians and practices, as a member of the Research and Registry Committees and also the American Society of Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) as a member of the Ethics Committee and the COVID19 Task Force.
Dr. Kawwass chose to join the Emory faculty because she genuinely believes that the Emory Reproductive Center offers exceptional evidence-based fertility care. She is committed to individualizing and optimizing care for each of her patients. She appreciates the emotional investment that goes along with fertility treatment and is dedicated to making the journey toward parenthood as smooth as possible for them. Dr. Kawwass is particularly interested in infertility, in vitro fertilization, functional hypothalamic amenorrhea, third party reproduction, and fertility preservation (oocyte cryopreservation).
As a Guest Researcher at the CDC, Dr. Kawwass is also a member of the National ART Surveillance Team. A few of her recent contributions to the literature include publications in Obstetrics and Gynecology (tubal factor infertility and perinatal outcomes, monozygotic twinning among ART-conceived infants), Fertility and Sterility (assisted hatching trends and outcomes), and JAMA (donor oocyte trends and predictors of good perinatal outcomes, safety of ART in the US, and ICSI trends and outcomes). Her publications have received national press, including interviews by the Associated Press and USA Today.
Dr. Kawwass is board-certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology and in Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility and is a member of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine and the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. She is fluent in English and French, medical Spanish, and conversational Lebanese Arabic. Dr. Kawwass interests outside of medicine include distance running, foreign travel, and spending time at the beach. She and her husband, Peter Thompson, MD a plastic surgeon at Emory, enjoy spending time with their two children.
Academic Appointment
- Division Director, Gynecology and Obstetrics, Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility
- Medical Director, Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Emory Reproductive Center
- Professor, Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, Emory Reproductive Center
Education
Degrees
- MD from University of Virginia
- BS from Davidson College
Research
Publications
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Enhancing Reproductive Access: The Influence of Expanded Employer Fertility Benefits at a Single Academic Center from 2017-2021.
05/05/2025 Authors: Herweck AM; Delawalla ML; Reed C; Carson TL; Ahuja A; Chey P; McNamara M; Gupta K; Bosch A; Hipp HS -
Transfer of embryos affected by monogenic conditions: an Ethics Committee Opinion.
Fertil Steril Volume: 123 Page(s): 779 - 785
05/01/2025 Authors: Ethics Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine -
Preimplantation genetic testing after Dobbs: reproductive endocrinology and infertility physician perceptions of impact on counseling and patient decision-making.
Fertil Steril Volume: 123 Page(s): 905 - 906
05/01/2025 Authors: Manguso E; Traub AM; Kline J; Mermin-Bunnell K; Kawwass JF; Marsidi AM -
How Dobbs May Influence the Geographic Distribution of Medical Trainees in the United States.
Health Educ Behav Volume: 52 Page(s): 242 - 246
04/01/2025 Authors: Traub AM; Mermin-Bunnell K; Wang K; Aaron B; King LP; Kawwass JF -
Abortion restrictions and medical residency applications.
J Med Ethics Volume: 51 Page(s): 79 - 86
01/23/2025 Authors: Mermin-Bunnell K; Traub AM; Wang K; Aaron B; King LP; Kawwass J -
Polycystic ovarian syndrome, obesity, and insulin resistance: intertwined comorbidities that impact assisted reproductive technology success.
Fertil Steril Volume: 123 Page(s): 65 - 66
01/01/2025 Authors: Smigoc K; Kawwass JF -
Race, ethnicity, and assisted reproductive technology outcomes: where do we go from here?
Fertil Steril Volume: 122 Page(s): 1010 - 1011
12/01/2024 Authors: Diego D; Kawwass JF -
Gamete and embryo donation guidance.
Fertil Steril Volume: 122 Page(s): 799 - 813
11/01/2024 Authors: Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine and the Practice Committee for the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology. Electronic address: asrm@asrm.org; Practice Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine and the Practice Committee for the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology -
Trends and outcomes of fresh and frozen donor oocyte cycles in the United States.
Fertil Steril Volume: 122 Page(s): 844 - 855
11/01/2024 Authors: Braun CB; DeSantis CE; Lee JC; Kissin DM; Kawwass JF -
Gestational carrier cycles: embryology trends, national guideline compliance, and resultant perinatal outcomes in the United States, 2014-2020.
Am J Obstet Gynecol Volume: 231 Page(s): 446.e1 - 446.e11
10/01/2024 Authors: Traub AM; Shandley LM; Hipp HS; Kawwass JF