Jack and Eldora Vetter began Vetter Health Services (VHS) in 1975 with the belief that elderly people deserve dignity in life. Forty years later; what began as the couples personal mission has grown to include more than 30 award-winning senior-care facilities home to 2;200 residents and patients who are cared for by 3;500 team members. Based in Elkhorn; Nebraska; VHS is recognized as a national leader in providing safe; comfortable; and happy senior living centers. Each facility is built around the individual needs of residents and the community; every aspect of care and operation is shaped by the VHS mission; vision; and values. Support and expertise are always available from administrators and team members who share Jack and Eldora Vetters heart for service and passion for excellence. Together; they are changing the view of long-term care for senior citizens.
#979441 in eBooks 2015-03-16 2015-03-16File Name: B00VETVKVE
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Great little bookBy liz ClinganI love looking through this and will do time and time again brilliant ; great ideas very good inspiring read3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Lacks real practical useBy SussmanAs books go it delivers good pictorials; the writing style is relatively informative and not taxing in the language it uses. It gives indications of how to create and follow through on a build; however; this is not really fleshed out to give a more definitive text. While; the accompanying television show talked fleetingly about building code; and what local authorities would want and need to enable people to create their own little `shed. This book does not give these or any other details. The imagination is a powerful force and both the television series and the examples given in this hardcover are for the most part sumptuous in their deliver; how can a person/family translate that into a more practical frame work? At times; it hard to see who this volume was really intended for; as in part; it only gleans lightly on certain topic areas. Even as a coffee table volume; for me it only has certain amount of mileage.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Amazing quickie TV spin-offBy RobinThough the back cover blurb says the contents have a wealth of brilliant ideas I cant see that it will inspire many people to relocate from their existing place of living. Certainly there are some wonderful living-space solutions and they are extremely varied but the book comes across to me as no more than a visual curiosity of buildings spun-off from a TV (on Britains Channel 4) show and the books production certainly gives that impression as well.As I turned the pages I became more and more aware of the poor quality of the books presentation rather than what the photos and text should have been telling me. Each structure has a different typeface for the heading; line length varies from page to page and frequently they dont even line up across a page with two columns; some photos are badly cropped and the copy falls ahort on many pages. Intriguing photos are not backed up with relevant text. The Schoffice (page 132-133) has three interesting photos of a curving wooden office but the words give no indication about who designed it; where it is or what its like to work in. The Village Underground (pages 96-98) uses four photos with only one helping the reader get an impression of working in a disused subway carriage - its certainly a clever space saving solution though.This seems very much a quickie book and I predict it will be selling quite cheaply on the net and in bookshops fairly soon.