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Former Firefighter/Paramedic Turns SWAT Doctor in Dallas


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While doing some Googling on the "Dallas SWAT" boondoggle, I ran across this relevant article from a year ago, that talks about one of the team physicians, his being a former firemonkey/paramedic, and their plans for the future of Tactical EMS in Dallas.

http://www.emsresponder.com/online/article...n=1&id=1554

Former Firefighter/Paramedic Turns SWAT Doctor in Dallas

HEATHER CASPI

EMSResponder.Com News

Dallas SWAT officers are now more likely to survive an injury thanks to emergency medical support from a full time, tactically trained trauma surgeon.

Some other SWAT teams around the country are served by doctors on a volunteer or part time basis, but Dallas officials know of no other major city that has a doctor dedicated to the team full time.

"I'm the first physician who's every day job is to be on a major metropolitan SWAT team," said Dr. Alex Eastman. He's on call 24 hours a day and deploys alongside SWAT officers in order to provide immediate, comprehensive medical care at the scene of an emergency. He said he has the same training as the rest of the team.

"It's just that my job is not to go out there and be a police officer. My job is to go out there and take care of these guys," he said.

Eastman was no stranger to public safety when he took on this role; before medical school he was a firefighter/paramedic in Kensington, Maryland, he said.

He got involved with the Dallas Police Department through a two-year fellowship with the Department of Surgery and the Division of Emergency Medicine at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, where he did his residency in surgery.

However, he won't be leaving when the fellowship ends. The police department plans to keep him on to develop a medical support program for the SWAT team. Their goal is to tactically train and utilize a team of paramedics from Dallas Fire Rescue so that members can respond with the SWAT team as needed. Eastman will continue to respond to incidents and direct the paramedics in the field.

He said this type of program is already in place in many smaller cities, but he doesn't know of any other large cities doing it.

"Tactical emergency medical support has been evolving over the last few years. It really is in its infancy, but a very forward thinking lieutenant here in Dallas had this idea for a while, and we were just finally able to put it all together," he said.

"I think cities are beginning to realize that the provision of medical services for these guys, who are valuable investments for their cities, is important."

Dallas SWAT commander Lt. Robert Owens was instrumental in arranging the program.

Owens said medical support is more common among smaller, more suburban SWAT teams because they are less active and it therefore costs them less to have additional personnel train and respond, especially when it involves overtime.

He said the largest city in Texas that does it is Austin, which has a part time SWAT team unlike Dallas, which has 50 SWAT officers on two different shifts.

"The way we solve that is we're going to do it all on-duty," he said. "That's one of the advantages with Alex - he's being paid to be with us."

He said Eastman has been instrumental on several incidents, including one at which a suspect shot himself in the head.

"We dragged him out and Dr. Eastman was right there and stabilized him," Owens said. The suspect later died at the hospital, but, "If that was an officer or a hostage, he had medical attention on him in seconds."

Owens added that Eastman has assisted the team in other ways by serving as their "family doctor" and advising them on nutrition, hydration, minor injuries and other non-emergency issues that affect an officer's performance.

Eastman is also serving as a medical advisor to the department on Taser use, and has provided training on self-aid and buddy-aid for patrol officers, which teaches them what they can do in the event of an injury in the minutes before an ambulance arrives.

"I think it gives everybody a more comfortable feeling," Owens said.

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This is actually the career I would like to get into... if anyone has some good tips on how to get into it please let me know. I am currently an EMT-B and going to medic school in spring of 09. I will have a bachelors in CJ here in the next year as well. I would like to get into doing tactical EMS because I like both law enforcement and EMS and want to do the both of them together.

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This is actually the career I would like to get into... if anyone has some good tips on how to get into it please let me know. I am currently an EMT-B and going to medic school in spring of 09. I will have a bachelors in CJ here in the next year as well. I would like to get into doing tactical EMS because I like both law enforcement and EMS and want to do the both of them together.

I'm not sure, but check into applying to a Police Dept. now or into an academy now, or as soon as possible. Talk to your local dept. and get your foot in the door.

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I would like to get into doing tactical EMS because I like both law enforcement and EMS and want to do the both of them together.

So would the other 3000 EMTs and medics who shell out thousands of dollars for a weekend warrior "tactical medic" course every year, because it looks "cool", then never, ever actually get a tac med job or assignment. The positions simply aren't common. And those who find those positions rarely ever actually deploy and use their knowledge and skills for anything more than training. SWAT shootouts are less common than lottery wins. So this exciting "career" you are looking for really boils down to twenty years of writing speeding tickets, and maybe twice splinting a sprained ankle at SWAT training.

A more realistic mix would be in those few departments out west (and elsewhere) where law enforcement agencies engage in either rural EMS response or aeromedical evacuation. It's common in rural California. It's not as sexy as "tactical" EMS, but it's mixing law enforcement and medicine together in an interesting combination.

And how do you know you like law enforcement? Have you ever done it?

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Unless you want to live in a city with a full-time SWAT team, which are few and far between, you will have to get ON a SWAT team to become a SWAT medic. Hillbilly podunk town isn't going to pay you 40 hours a week on their payroll for the 2 calls and 12 trainings a year. Here is your path to become a SWAT medic.

[*]Become edumacated on topics besides emergency care (If you read the story, many SWAT medics/docs are these guys trainers, family doctor, confidant, ect) (Life time)

[*]Get a Bachelors Degree (2 - 4 years)

[*]Go through the Acadamey (6 months)

[*]Get hired by the department (6 months-1 year)

[*]Go through department training (6 months - 1 year)

[*]Put in your time (1 - 3 years)

[*]Get on SWAT team (1 - 5 years of trying out)

[*]Put in your time (1 - 5 years)

[*]Become SWAT Medic

I'm not trying to discourage you, but you have to realize, you don't just wake up on Monday and say I will be a SWAT Medic, and have the job on Friday.

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