September 2022
Jessica M
Lee
,
MSN, MBA, RN, CEN, TCRN
Trauma
Children's Hospital & Medical Center
Omaha
,
NE
United States
She has instilled a sense of camaraderie amongst her team, planning team-building events, encouraging volunteer opportunities, and organizing monthly lunches, as a means for them to all stay connected.
Jessica is a tremendous asset to Children's Hospital & Medical Center. She has a true passion for trauma. She was instrumental in helping Children's to achieve their reverification as an American College of Surgeons Level 2 Pediatric Trauma Center.
She was involved in bringing back the Blood & Blood Products Committee, which is needed not only in her department, but throughout the entire organization. Jessica is a tremendous role model to everyone on her team, and throughout the enterprise. She has instilled a sense of camaraderie amongst her team, planning team-building events, encouraging volunteer opportunities, and organizing monthly lunches, as a means for them to all stay connected. She truly believes in the team environment.
She is constantly revising policies to make sure they are up-to-date and in compliance with national standards and guidelines. Jessica's role is unique, in that she works with all departments, and all physician groups, as well as pre-hospital teams and outside hospitals. She is actively involved in the Pediatric Trauma Society on a national level, on the Nebraska State Trauma Board, teaches ATLS, ATCN, and TNCC, volunteers at events to provide injury prevention education and items to kids in the community, and teaches Stop the Bleed to many people throughout the region.
She loves to provide free education through national forums for the hospital, herself, and the trauma team. She has helped plan several educational conferences throughout the state, including the Children's Trauma Conference, Children's 1st Annual Injury Prevention Conference, the Nebraska Trauma Nurse Coordinator Conference, and the Omaha Area Trauma Symposium. Jessica has a close relationship with Omaha Fire, which enables her to constructively give advice and feedback on patients they bring. This in turn has increased the patient volume Children's receives from our local fire departments. She truly believes that every child is best treated at Children’s and wants what is best for every patient that enters the hospital.
She was involved in bringing back the Blood & Blood Products Committee, which is needed not only in her department, but throughout the entire organization. Jessica is a tremendous role model to everyone on her team, and throughout the enterprise. She has instilled a sense of camaraderie amongst her team, planning team-building events, encouraging volunteer opportunities, and organizing monthly lunches, as a means for them to all stay connected. She truly believes in the team environment.
She is constantly revising policies to make sure they are up-to-date and in compliance with national standards and guidelines. Jessica's role is unique, in that she works with all departments, and all physician groups, as well as pre-hospital teams and outside hospitals. She is actively involved in the Pediatric Trauma Society on a national level, on the Nebraska State Trauma Board, teaches ATLS, ATCN, and TNCC, volunteers at events to provide injury prevention education and items to kids in the community, and teaches Stop the Bleed to many people throughout the region.
She loves to provide free education through national forums for the hospital, herself, and the trauma team. She has helped plan several educational conferences throughout the state, including the Children's Trauma Conference, Children's 1st Annual Injury Prevention Conference, the Nebraska Trauma Nurse Coordinator Conference, and the Omaha Area Trauma Symposium. Jessica has a close relationship with Omaha Fire, which enables her to constructively give advice and feedback on patients they bring. This in turn has increased the patient volume Children's receives from our local fire departments. She truly believes that every child is best treated at Children’s and wants what is best for every patient that enters the hospital.