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The Caregivers Marketplace is a one-of-a-kind service providing ongoing cash
back rebates on purchases of health and beauty care products used every day by
people caring for aging, ill, disabled or special needs family members or
friends.
Every family caregiver knows that it can be expensive to buy products to assist
with the ordinary activities of daily living such as bathing, nutrition,
incontinence care, and others. These types of expenses are not covered by
private insurance or Medicare. Caregivers Marketplace helps ease this financial
burden with ongoing cash back rebates on purchases of eligible products. You can
apply for cash back every time you buy eligible products, no matter where you
buy them. More Info
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Search and compare
nursing homes, assisted living facilities, home health and hospice agencies.
Obtain discounts on eldercare. Talk to an eldercare expert for advice.
More Info
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Medicare
- is a non-profit,
private operating foundation focusing on the major health care issues facing
the U.S., as well as the U.S. role in global health policy. www.kff.org
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is a nonprofit news organization
committed to in-depth coverage of health care policy and politics.
KHN is a major program of the Kaiser Family Foundation,
a non-profit private operating foundation, based in Menlo Park, Calif.,
dedicated to producing and communicating the best
possible analysis and information on health issues.
www.kaiserhealthnews.org
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is a project of the Henry J. Kaiser
Family Foundation and is designed to provide free, up-to-date,
and easy-to-use health data on all 50 states.
Statehealthfacts.org
provides data on more than 500 health topics and is
linked to both the Kaiser Family Foundation
website (www.kff.org) and KaiserNetwork.org (www.kaisernetwork.org).
Bookstores will tear the covers off books that may not sell and return the
covers to the publishers for credit. Ask bookstores if you can have these
books.(Or, if you're not proud, look in the dumpsters). People sometimes throw
new magazines away in the post office.
Also, if you are seriously considering advertising in national magazines, write
to those magazines requesting a rate card (advertising schedule) and a free copy
of each magazine. Some magazines will give free samples to lure you into
subscribing. Hence, a source of free magazines. Ask for samples of mail-order
publications. They may need an "active name" for their mailing list and it will
only cost you the price of a postcard.
Look
for 800 numbers on products. Many offer free valuable information. You don't
even have to pay postage. If you are taking medication, the manufacturer will
probably send you free information on your medication. I take Cardizem, and
Marion Merrell Dow sends me a free newsletter. They also sent me a valuable book
on stress and the heart, free. They also sent me a free electronic pillbox.
Your
physician usually has free literature for the asking. Get on mailing lists of
products or services in which you are interested. You will be kept up-to-date on
the latest technologies and news in your field of interest, free. If you start a
business, there are magazines that are free for the asking. Sometimes there is a
free business reply card and you pay no postage. They make their money from the
advertisers in their magazines and you receive timely articles. For a copy of my
new book, essays exposing the myths of political correctness, send me two
dollars. Read it. Then, if you want to keep it for reference, send an additional
three dollars. You will not see much of this documented material in the media.
This is IBM shareware written in ASCII and on 5 1/4 inch computer disk. Please
refer to the name of this publication. Your comments are welcome.
Best
wishes in your mailorder endeavor.
RUSSELL COMMUNICATIONS
PO Box 27 Carden City, MO 64747-0027
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Click on the links above to view more details on each of these plans.
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