About Robert G. Aycock, MD
Bay Area Reconstructive and Plastic Surgeon, Dr. Robert Aycock has been practicing cosmetic surgery since 1988. Dr. Aycock is a Board-Certified Plastic Surgeon with offices in the San Francisco Bay Area in Walnut Creek and Greenbrae, California. He is the Founder and Medical Director of Greenbrae Surgery Center and Bon Air Surgery Center. After completing his medical training in Michigan, Dr. Aycock trained in the General Surgery Department at Providence Hospital in Southfield, Michigan. He was then selected to be a resident in the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Providence Hospital, and the world-renowned Craniofacial Institute, where children worldwide are referred for reconstruction of many congenital deformities. During his time at Providence Hospital, Dr. Aycock was privileged to receive extensive training from the renowned staff of plastic surgeons. This training was in all aspects of trauma care as well as in his specialty of cosmetic surgery. Dr. Aycock received further training in plastic surgery and craniofacial surgery at Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, as well as burn reconstruction training for the Brooke Army Burn Unit in San Antonio, Texas. In 1988, with his training in Michigan complete, Dr. Aycock became a partner in the practice of Finger, Smith and Aycock in Savannah, Georgia. During his time in Savannah, Dr. Aycock refined his skills in all aspects of cosmetic and reconstructive surgery. In 1993, Dr. Aycock moved to the Bay area with his wife, who is from Marin County, and since that time has concentrated on cosmetic surgery of the face and body. Dr. Aycock has staff privileges at John Muir Medical Center and Mt. Diablo Medical Center in the East Bay area, and Marin General Hospital and Novato Community Hospital in Marin County,California. Dr. Aycock takes pride in his practice and is known for his empathy, patience, and dedication to the highest quality pre and post-operative care necessary to ensure the finest surgical result. His goal is to enhance each patient’s appearance by looking beyond a specific procedure but rather to person as a whole.