Ann L Kellams, MD, IBCLS, FAAP, FABM
Breastfeeding Lactation Medicine
Additional Locations
Bio & Overview
Ann Kellams, MD, is board-certified in both pediatrics and breastfeeding and lactation medicine, is an international board-certified lactation consultant, and a professor in the Department of Pediatrics. She has been practicing general pediatrics since 1995 and joined the faculty at UVA in 2006.
With her patients, Dr. Kellams tries to meet families where they are and help them reach their goals by providing experience and expertise. She feels especially privileged when new parents allow her to be a part of their journey. “Parenting is hard, and humbling, and also wonderful, and we are glad to support them in any way we can,” she adds.
From an early age, Dr. Kellams knew she wanted to be a pediatrician, and never swayed from that goal. She went directly through her education and training. Born in Texas, she spent some of her early years in Northern California while her father completed his PhD at Stanford. But most of her childhood was spent in Houston, with her mother and maternal grandparents. In high school, she helped lead a national championship winning dance team as a Captain.
Dr. Kellams attended the University of Texas at Austin for her undergraduate and graduated summa cum laude as a Dean’s Honored Graduate. She then went on to medical school at the University of California, San Francisco. There, she met her husband, a family medicine doctor. They couples-matched for residency at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
For 9 years, Dr. Kellams worked in pediatric private practice in the Shenandoah valley, providing the full spectrum of care rounding on newborns and pediatric patients in the hospital as well as in a busy, pediatric clinic. In 2004, she began teaching a course called The Healer’s Art for medical students at UVA. This course, which she helped develop as a medical student, is about finding meaning and humanism in medicine and is now taught at half of the medical schools in the US.
In 2006, Dr. Kellams joined the UVA Department of Pediatrics faculty and became the Medical Director of the Newborn service on the maternity unit. She became an internationally board-certified lactation consultant in 2007, and in 2011 became the founder and director of UVA’s Breastfeeding and Lactation Medicine program, a program which has grown ever since. In 2018, Dr. Kellams became the Vice Chair for Clinical Affairs for UVA’s Department of Pediatrics. In 2022, she was inducted into the American Pediatric Society, and in 2023 she was in the first class of physicians to become certified by the North American Board of Breastfeeding and Lactation Medicine.
In her free time, Kellams loves to cook, wine-taste, watch movies, paint, and spend quality time with family and friends.
Academic Information
- Academic Role
- Professor
- Gender
- Female
- Languages
- Spanish, English
- Age Groups Seen
- Infants (0-2)
Children (2-12)
Adults (21-65)
- Primary Education
- University of California, San Francisco, School of Medicine
- Residency
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine
- Certification
- International Board of Lactation Consultant Examiners (International Board Certified Lactation Consultant (IBCLC)), American Board of Pediatrics (Pediatrics)
- Appointment
- Vice-Chair - Clinical Affairs
Highlights
Dr. Ann Kellams
I'm Dr. Ann Kellams, and I am Medical Director of our Well Newborn Service and Breastfeeding Medicine. I always wanted to be a doctor and in particular a baby doctor and became a general pediatrician sort of fulfilling that dream and was in private practice for almost nine years and then really, really got interested in mothers and babies. What I do is interact with families at a very important time, usually a momentous life event, and I feel privileged to be sort of a visitor or somebody walking with them in that journey. There's nothing like helping a new mom welcome a baby into the world and see a family being born. I serve as the representative for the babies on our leadership team that really looks at how can we make the birth process as family-friendly and science-based, state of the art as possible. The other thing I do is I serve as medical director of our breastfeeding medicine program. This program has paired pediatricians and lactation consultants, nutritionists. We also work with the departments of obstetrics and gynecology and family medicine to provide comprehensive care to mothers and babies who are breastfeeding. I think that you're at a place at UVA where if there's a problem with mom or baby, you have specialists, you have intensive care units that are right down the hall or a floor away. All the while that's behind the scenes, we're trying to keep this as family-friendly and as sort of normal feeling a process as possible.