Jie Qiao is a professor at Peking University Third Hospital and serves as its president. She earned her bachelor's degree in medical science from Peking University Health Science Center and her master's and doctoral degrees in obstetrics and gynecology from Peking University Third Hospital. She completed postdoctoral training at Stanford University Medical Center and conducted visiting scholar work at Queen Mary Hospital of the University of Hong Kong. Qiao was promoted to associate professor in 1997 and full professor in 2001 at Peking University Third Hospital. She has held administrative roles including director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and director of the Reproductive Medicine Center before becoming hospital president in 2012. She also serves as executive vice president of Peking University Health Science Center and director of the National Clinical Research Center on Obstetrics and Gynecology Disease.
Qiao's research focuses on the molecular mechanisms of human gametogenesis and embryo development, causes of infertility, and clinical treatments, as well as fertility preservation and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis. She has led projects funded by China's National 973 Program and the National Natural Science Foundation, publishing over 200 SCI papers as first or corresponding author in journals including Cell, Nature, Science, JAMA, and The Lancet. Her contributions include constructing high-resolution genetic maps, profiling transcriptomes and methylomes of human embryos and germ cells, and developing non-invasive methods for assessing endometrial receptivity. Qiao is an academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering and has received the National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars, multiple State Science and Technology Progress Awards (Second Class), the Cheung Kong Scholar title, and the Ho Leung Ho Lee Foundation Science and Technology Progress Award. She is chief editor of several textbooks and monographs in reproductive medicine and holds leadership positions in national medical associations.