Cody is a smaller community, and nursing homes may face challenges common across rural Wyoming: limited staffing pools, higher reliance on consistent caregiver assignment, and scheduling constraints during peak admissions or turnover.
Pressure ulcers can develop quietly because the early signs—redness, warmth, or skin that doesn’t blanch—may not be treated as urgent without timely skin assessments and a working repositioning plan. When a resident can’t reliably communicate discomfort (due to dementia, limited mobility, or reduced sensation), families may notice changes later—after the skin has already broken down.
A key legal question is whether the facility responded to known risk factors with the level of monitoring and prevention a reasonable provider would use in that situation.


