First Five Minutes with Dr. Alexander Eastman
Dr. Alex Eastman shares how Parkland and Dallas SWAT shaped his belief that trauma care must start at the scene, not after transport.
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6 episodios
Fixing Officer Safety from Both Sides
Trauma surgeon and Dallas Police Lieutenant Dr. Alexander Eastman [https://alexandereastman.weebly.com/] has spent over 20 years treating critically injured officers in the hospital and standing beside them on the streets as a sworn officer and Chief Medical Officer. In this episode, he shares eye-opening research on rising trauma deaths among law enforcement, why we lack proper national injury tracking, the cultural barriers to officer wellness, and how the Dallas Police Hemorrhage Control Program is saving lives in the critical first minutes. From the operating room to SWAT callouts, Dr. Eastman offers rare insight into what real officer safety looks like and what still needs to change.
Bringing Trauma Care to the Scene
The Time Gap: Why I Took Trauma Care to the Streets with Dallas SWAT
Early in my career at Parkland Hospital in Dallas, I kept seeing the same heartbreaking pattern: patients arrived too late. The surgery was perfect. The team was ready. But the damage from those lost minutes was already done. In this episode, I share the story of the moment I realized trauma care cannot wait for the hospital. In 2004 I made a simple but controversial suggestion — send trauma surgeons out with the Dallas SWAT Team so real medical help starts at the scene of the injury. You’ll hear what happened when we put the idea into action: lives saved in minutes instead of hours, bleeding stopped on the spot, airways opened before brains were lost, and police officers and civilians who got to go home to their families. This is the story behind the tactical medic model that many systems now use. It’s also the reason I started this podcast — because the first five minutes after injury are the ones that matter most. If you work in emergency medicine, law enforcement, or just want to understand how real trauma systems save lives, this episode is for you.
The Third Edition That Matches the Way Trauma Really Happens
Dr. Alexander Eastman talks about what the Parkland Trauma Handbook (Third Edition) means to him beyond just being a book on a shelf in this short reflection. He remembers the training culture at Parkland Memorial Hospital that shaped his thinking and why a practical handbook is still useful in a world full of rules, apps, and constant updates. He also talks about the thought process behind the third edition: what needed to be made clearer, what needed to be made easier, and what rules never change when patients come in hurt and time is short. It is a focused reminder that good trauma care depends on being ready, knowing what is most important, and having teams that trust the basics.
The Golden Hour on the Front Line
The "golden hour" had already changed trauma care across the country when Dr. Alex Eastman trained at Parkland Memorial Hospital. But experience taught him something that most people don't know. The golden hour doesn't start at the doors of the hospital. It starts at the scene, where people are often confused, long before the trauma team can get there. Dr. Eastman [https://www.alexeastman.net/medical/golden-hour/] talks about how tactical emergency medicine helps fill that gap in this short article. He explains how Tactical Combat Casualty Care principles shaped civilian response via Tactical Emergency Casualty Care, providing law enforcement, fire, EMS, and trained civilians with a systematic approach to take action in the initial moments. He also talks about why early intervention is important, how basic first aid skills like stopping bleeding and knowing how to clear an airway can change the outcome, and how education gives responders the confidence they need when things get tough. Lastly, he thinks about what will happen next: hospitals and first responders will work together more closely, care will flow more smoothly, and the golden hour will have a clearer, bigger definition.
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