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Cost of Type 1 medication in Australia ?
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<blockquote data-quote="Jen&amp;Khaleb" data-source="post: 119490" data-attributes="member: 13077"><p>Aclimatising to a new country and culture is difficult for anyone. As an Aussie who has also lived in England I can see positives and negatives for both places. An English (family friendly) pub is fantastic and not something you find here. </p><p></p><p>My son was sick with some sort of cold or flu nearly every day he was in England. His body just wasn't used to the onslaught of diseases. Of course, I missed my family and friends also. I went to work in England for next to nothing by the time I paid petrol and child care fees. Child care is subsidised here.</p><p></p><p>Many from the UK find it weird that their is no village life in Australia. I hated the 2 up/2 down housing all clustered together. I also hated the traffic.</p><p></p><p>Hard to comment on the employment issue. I spent nearly 10 years working in the backpacking industry and never found those wanting to work going without. I suppose it depends on visa conditions and what you are prepared to do.</p><p></p><p>Anyway, there's a lot of pros and cons. Depends on how adaptable you are.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jen&Khaleb, post: 119490, member: 13077"] Aclimatising to a new country and culture is difficult for anyone. As an Aussie who has also lived in England I can see positives and negatives for both places. An English (family friendly) pub is fantastic and not something you find here. My son was sick with some sort of cold or flu nearly every day he was in England. His body just wasn't used to the onslaught of diseases. Of course, I missed my family and friends also. I went to work in England for next to nothing by the time I paid petrol and child care fees. Child care is subsidised here. Many from the UK find it weird that their is no village life in Australia. I hated the 2 up/2 down housing all clustered together. I also hated the traffic. Hard to comment on the employment issue. I spent nearly 10 years working in the backpacking industry and never found those wanting to work going without. I suppose it depends on visa conditions and what you are prepared to do. Anyway, there's a lot of pros and cons. Depends on how adaptable you are. [/QUOTE]
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