Home › Maryland › Cumberland › UPMC Western Maryland Plastic Surgery
UPMC Western Maryland Plastic Surgery
3.9 ★★★★☆ 10 Google reviews · Tummy tuck surgeon in Cumberland, Maryland
Plan your consultation
- Board-certified plastic surgeon certified in plastic surgery — the recognized standard for a tummy tuck. Verify with the ABPS →
- Financing payment plans / medical financing (e.g. CareCredit) offered — ask what monthly options they accept
- Today see hours ·
- Phone +1 240-964-8931
- Website wmhsplasticsurgery.com — book a consultation and see their before/after galleries
Hours
| Monday | 8 am–4:30 pm |
| Tuesday | 8 am–4:30 pm |
| Wednesday | 8 am–4:30 pm |
| Thursday | 8 am–4:30 pm |
| Friday | 8 am–4:30 pm |
| Saturday | Closed |
| Sunday | Closed |
About this practice
What patients say again and again
“All my follow up appointments she made sure all was well and things were healing as needed.”
From the reviews
Before seeing her, I had an appointment with Dr. Carpenter in Cumberland. His staff was nasty and the office felt very pretentious. When I walked in for my apt with Dr. Jackson, I felt comfortable and welcome and when she came into my exam room, she projected such a good aura.
My wife Anita has been under Dr. Jacksons care for at least a year and a half now. Dr Jackson and her staff are fantastic. I (David) have attended most every appointment with my wife and have been highly impressed with every visit. Dr.
What a wonderful group of staff. Very friendly and respectful. Office is clean and makes you feel comfortable. Dr Jackson did a skin graft surgery on my 3rd degree burn. She did an excellent job! All my follow up appointments she made sure all was well and things were healing as needed. She has great bedside manner.
Dr.Jackson is the best she takes the time too listen i would recommend her too everyone
Researching a tummy tuck?
A tummy tuck (abdominoplasty) is major surgery with real risks and a recovery that usually runs several weeks — this page is a starting point for finding a surgeon, not medical advice. The most useful next step is a consultation, where a surgeon reviews your health history, examines you, talks through your options, and gives a personal quote. Bring questions and don't rush the decision.
Questions worth asking: Are you board-certified in plastic surgery (and can I verify it)? Where would you operate, and is the facility accredited? Can I see before-and-after photos of your own patients? What are the risks and the realistic recovery timeline for me? What's your revision policy if something needs adjusting? Whatever a listing says, always verify certification directly with the American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS) at abplasticsurgery.org, and discuss your candidacy, risks, and recovery with the surgeon.