2009.01.08: January 8, 2009: Headlines: COS - Mongolia: Staff: Medicine: UB Post: Lyn Stinnett, a Physician’s Assistant working with the Peace Corps in Mongolia, has a few friendly tips to make it through the next several months: invest in some cashmere, stay dry, and go for loose, rather than tight-fitting, long underwear

Peace Corps Online: Directory: Mongolia: Peace Corps Mongolia : Peace Corps Mongolia: Newest Stories: 2009.01.08: January 8, 2009: Headlines: COS - Mongolia: Staff: Medicine: UB Post: Lyn Stinnett, a Physician’s Assistant working with the Peace Corps in Mongolia, has a few friendly tips to make it through the next several months: invest in some cashmere, stay dry, and go for loose, rather than tight-fitting, long underwear

By Admin1 (admin) (151.196.25.17) on Saturday, January 10, 2009 - 2:44 pm: Edit Post

Lyn Stinnett, a Physician’s Assistant working with the Peace Corps in Mongolia, has a few friendly tips to make it through the next several months: invest in some cashmere, stay dry, and go for loose, rather than tight-fitting, long underwear

Lyn Stinnett, a Physician’s Assistant working with the Peace Corps in Mongolia, has a few friendly tips to make it through the next several months: invest in some cashmere, stay dry, and go for loose, rather than tight-fitting, long underwear

While volunteers come into Mongolia’s capital for a yearly check-up, Stinnett has to do most of her diagnoses over the phone. That, and routinely sub-zero temperatures, can make life rough for an ill PCV, especially those stationed in the far corners of Mongolia. “It’s one of the more challenging countries to volunteer,” Stinnett said. “Those who make their two years, you’ve got to hand it to them.” While local host families take charge of preparing PCVs for winter—especially those spending time in gers out in the countryside—Stinnett and her fellow Peace Corps Medical Officer Paul Wilson assess symptoms and offer advice or treatment on their maladies ranging from toothaches to broken bones. But much of Stinnett’s job involves reminding the volunteers she oversees to take good care of themselves. “We instill in them that they are responsible for their care,” she said. “We help them, but I can’t be their mother.”

Lyn Stinnett, a Physician’s Assistant working with the Peace Corps in Mongolia, has a few friendly tips to make it through the next several months: invest in some cashmere, stay dry, and go for loose, rather than tight-fitting, long underwear

Tips and Times of a Peace Corps Medical Officer

Written by William Kennedy

Thursday, January 08, 2009.

For those who have survived the Mongolian winter so far, congratulations. But don’t pat yourself on the back just yet; winter promises to get much colder before it eases up sometime around May. If you’ve had trouble managing the cold or have newly arrived in the country, Lyn Stinnett, a Physician’s Assistant working with the Peace Corps, has a few friendly tips to make it through the next several months: invest in some cashmere, stay dry, and go for loose, rather than tight-fitting, long underwear.

Stinnett, a Phoenix, Arizona native, has worked for Peace Corps in nearly 20 countries during 14 years of service. For a health-care provider, she said, Mongolia provides some unique challenges. “The weather here is the most remarkable thing,” she said. “And you have to get used to the distances.”
About 2,000 miles separate the far-flung, 100-plus Peace Corps Volunteers working on projects across Mongolia. While volunteers come into Mongolia’s capital for a yearly check-up, Stinnett has to do most of her diagnoses over the phone. That, and routinely sub-zero temperatures, can make life rough for an ill PCV, especially those stationed in the far corners of Mongolia.

“It’s one of the more challenging countries to volunteer,” Stinnett said. “Those who make their two years, you’ve got to hand it to them.”
While local host families take charge of preparing PCVs for winter—especially those spending time in gers out in the countryside—Stinnett and her fellow Peace Corps Medical Officer Paul Wilson assess symptoms and offer advice or treatment on their maladies ranging from toothaches to broken bones. But much of Stinnett’s job involves reminding the volunteers she oversees to take good care of themselves. “We instill in them that they are responsible for their care,” she said. “We help them, but I can’t be their mother.”

Keeping the PCVs healthy and safe, however, is Stinnett’s top priority. When something serious happens, her office ensures that the patient is stabilized at the nearest hospital or brought back to Ulaanbaatar by ambulance or even plane, depending on the state of the emergency.

Having overseen an Arizona school district’s health for 11 years, Stinnett originally took the Peace Corps position for the adventure. “I have six children,” she said. When they had grown, “I thought it’s time Mom left home and had some fun for herself.”

Her career has taken her from Tanzania, to the Ukraine, to Kiribati, a small Island in the Pacific where Peace Corps no longer has a presence. While the travel is exciting, plenty of the illnesses Stinnett sees are mundane. In Mongolia, it’s not the cold that PCVs complain about the most; it’s diarrhea.
“They’re not used to the food—it’s so full of fat and meat,” she said.

For this ailment, Stinett’s advice is to tough it out, unless it lasts for three or more days.
“I don’t need to know about every case of diarrhea—it’s like sneezing,” she said. “[Everyone] goes through bouts of it and [eventually] they build up an immunity.”

Stinnett’s two-year Mongolian tour ends later in 2009. “It’s not the worst country and it’s not the best I’ve been to,” she said, “but it’s been a lovely home.” Her plans for the future are currently undecided, but she will probably look for somewhere warmer.
“I’m from Phoenix,” she said. “I don’t do winter.”




Links to Related Topics (Tags):

Headlines: January, 2009; Peace Corps Mongolia; Directory of Mongolia RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Mongolia RPCVs; Staff; Medicine





When this story was posted in January 2009, this was on the front page of PCOL:




Peace Corps Online The Independent News Forum serving Returned Peace Corps Volunteers RSS Feed

 Site Index Search PCOL with Google Contact PCOL Recent Posts Bulletin Board Open Discussion RPCV Directory Register


Director Ron Tschetter:  The PCOL Interview Date: December 9 2008 No: 1296 Director Ron Tschetter: The PCOL Interview
Peace Corps Director Ron Tschetter sat down for an in-depth interview to discuss the evacuation from Bolivia, political appointees at Peace Corps headquarters, the five year rule, the Peace Corps Foundation, the internet and the Peace Corps, how the transition is going, and what the prospects are for doubling the size of the Peace Corps by 2011. Read the interview and you are sure to learn something new about the Peace Corps. PCOL previously did an interview with Director Gaddi Vasquez.

PCOL's Candidate for Peace Corps Director Date: December 2 2008 No: 1288 PCOL's Candidate for Peace Corps Director
Honduras RPCV Jon Carson, 33, presided over thousands of workers as national field director for the Obama campaign and said the biggest challenge -- and surprise -- was the volume of volunteer help, including more than 15,000 "super volunteers," who were a big part of what made Obama's campaign so successful. PCOL endorses Jon Carson as the man who can revitalize the Peace Corps, bring it into the internet age, and meet Obama's goal of doubling the size of the Peace Corps by 2011.

December 14, 2008: This Month's Top Stories  Date: December 14 2008 No: 1305 December 14, 2008: This Month's Top Stories
Michael Adlerstein to make UN green 21 Nov
Harris Wofford writes: America at a turning point 14 Nov
Margaret Krome writes: Obama win shows power of idealism 11 Nov
Joseph Acaba to fly on February Shuttle Mission 11 Dec
Mary Matterer caught in Bangkok protests 6 Dec
Gen. Victor Renuart Jr. son served in Peace Corps 6 Dec
Kim Kohler opposes mega-projects in Guatemala 5 Dec
Gretchen Snoeyenbos' small town in Mali 5 Dec
Tim Shriver Calls for 'Dept of Development and Service' 4 Dec
Phil Lilienthal brings camp to kids in South Africa 3 Dec
New Peace Corps for Kids Web Site 3 Dec
Ilene Gelbaum brings infants into the world 26 Nov
Jonathan Zimmerman writes: Nepal's ban on private schools 26 Nov
George Packer writes: Will Obama Change? 25 Nov
Aly and Buddy Shanks exhibit African art 23 Nov
Luke King heads Mercy Corps in Congo 23 Nov
Echoes of JFK unavoidable in Obama Presidency 23 Nov
Joseph Opala Connects Africa to Gullah Community 21 Nov
William Yeatman writes: Coal in Kyrgyzstan 20 Nov
Doyle may become next PC Director 14 Nov
Michael O'Hanlon writes: How to Win in Afghanistan 14 Nov

New: More Stories from October and November 2008.

Some PCVs return to Bolivia on their own Date: October 23 2008 No: 1279 Some PCVs return to Bolivia on their own
Peace Corps has withdrawn all volunteers from Bolivia because of "growing instability" and the expulsion of US Ambassador Philip Goldberg after Bolivian President Evo Morales accused the American government of inciting violence in the country. This is not the first controversy surrounding Goldberg's tenure as US ambassador to Bolivia. Latest: Some volunteers have returned to Bolivia on their own to complete their projects.

PCVs Evacuated from Georgia Date: August 19 2008 No: 1254 PCVs Evacuated from Georgia
The Peace Corps has announced that all Volunteers and trainees serving in the Republic of Georgia are safe and they have been temporarily relocated to neighboring Armenia. Read the analysis by one RPCV on how Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili believed that he could launch a lightning assault on South Ossetia and reclaim the republic without substantial grief from Moscow and that Saakashvili's statements once the war began demonstrated that he expected real Western help in confronting Russia.



Read the stories and leave your comments.








Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.

Story Source: UB Post

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Mongolia; Staff; Medicine

PCOL42654
41


Add a Message


This is a public posting area. Enter your username and password if you have an account. Otherwise, enter your full name as your username and leave the password blank. Your e-mail address is optional.
Username:  
Password:
E-mail: