A trauma patient arrives with a shattered jaw, and the surgical team has hours, not days, to plan reconstruction. At Galilee Medical Center, that planning increasingly starts with a 3D-printed replica of the patient's own anatomy. The hospital built an in-house lab around a multi-material PolyJet printer, turning CT and MRI scans into full-color models that separate bone, soft tissue, and pathology in a single print. Surgeons handle the model before entering the operating room, rehearsing cuts and checking how a plate or graft will actually fit. For trauma cases, a model is ready in under a day, fast enough to inform decisions while the diagnosis is still fresh. Surgeons have used the lab for craniomaxillofacial trauma, tumor removal, and jaw reconstruction, also printing patient-specific cutting guides that translate the plan directly into the procedure. The lab has supported more than 160 surgeries to date.