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kaggle-ho-013869House Oversight

Lifestyle design advice and medical tourism tips

Lifestyle design advice and medical tourism tips The passage contains only personal lifestyle recommendations, PO box usage, and medical tourism cost comparisons. No mention of high‑profile individuals, government agencies, financial flows, or misconduct, making it essentially noise for investigative purposes. Key insights: Suggests using a PO Box to batch mail and protect personal address.; Promotes geo‑arbitrage for dental and medical procedures abroad.; Mentions cost differentials between countries for healthcare.

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House Oversight
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Lifestyle design advice and medical tourism tips The passage contains only personal lifestyle recommendations, PO box usage, and medical tourism cost comparisons. No mention of high‑profile individuals, government agencies, financial flows, or misconduct, making it essentially noise for investigative purposes. Key insights: Suggests using a PO Box to batch mail and protect personal address.; Promotes geo‑arbitrage for dental and medical procedures abroad.; Mentions cost differentials between countries for healthcare.

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kagglehouse-oversightlifestylemail-managementmedical-tourismgeo‑arbitrage

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
» LIFESTYLE DESIGN IN ACTION Batching tool—PO Box: This might be stating the obvious, but one easy way to encourage batching of your mail is to use a PO Box versus getting mail delivered to your house. We got our PO Box to limit access to our physical address online, but it also encourages you to get the mail less and deal with it in batch. Our post office has recycling bins, so at least 60% of the mail doesn’t even come home with us. For a while I was only getting and managing the mail once a week, and I found not only did it take less time overall, I did a better job managing it and getting it out of the way versus looking at it and setting it aside for future follow up. —LAURA TURNER For families, the four-hour workweek doesn’t have to mean four months on a sailboat in the Caribbean unless that’s their dream, but even the simple ideal of having time to take a walk in the park every evening or spending weekends together, makes taking actions to implement this program worthwhile. [There are many different approaches for making this work]: Kids have to promise they won’t bother Mommy in the evening while she works on the computer, the husband watches the kids in the evening, both parents make plans once a week to have someone take care of the kids, etc. Then close with the huge payoff for the family of having more time to spend with each other. —ADRIENNE JENKINS Why not combine a mini-retirement with dentistry (or medical) geoarbitrage and finance your trip with the savings? I lived in Thailand for four months and got root canal treatment and a crown for Vz of the price that it costs in Australia. There are many upmarket clinics set up for “expats” and health travelers in Thailand, Philippines, Vietnam, Goa, etc., with English-speaking dentists. And in Europe many people go to Poland or Hungary. To research, just Google “dentist” and the country and you will come across practices advertising to foreigners. Talk to expats when you’re in the country or on online chat forums for recommendations. Now I’m in Australia I still combine my travels with annual dentist checkups—and the savings often finance my airfare. Even between developed countries there are significant cost differences. For example France is far cheaper than the UK and Australia is cheaper than the U.S. [Note from Tim: Learn more about the incredible world of medical tourism and geoarbitrage at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical tourism. Even large insurers like AETNA often cover overseas treatments and surgeries. ] —ANONYMOUS 2. This habit alone can change your life. It seems small but has an enormous effect. 3. Jonathan B. Spira and Joshua B. Feintuch, The Cost of Not Paying Attention: How Interruptions

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