Built for Wyoming’s Miners. Committed to Their Families.
The men and women who worked those mines and mills understood risk. They breathed the dust, handled the ore, and kept the industry running during some of the most consequential decades in American history. Many of them developed serious health conditions as a result.
Four Corners Home Care was founded to serve those workers—and to make sure their families knew that federal law recognized that sacrifice and provided real, meaningful benefits to address it. something that would take federal policy decades to fully recognize: the men and women who worked at Y-12, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, K-25, and the surrounding facilities had given something profound—and they deserved care that honored that sacrifice.
We welcome you into our family, just as you welcome us into your home.
Our Story
2011 - Founded in Riverton, WY
Four Corners Home Care opens in Riverton—the heart of Fremont County and one of Wyoming’s most significant uranium mining regions. From day one, the focus is on RECA-eligible uranium workers and their families.
Building a Wyoming-First Model
Four Corners develops a care model designed specifically for Wyoming’s rural geography and independent culture. Care comes to the patient—not the other way around. Case managers learn the DOL landscape for Wyoming workers inside and out.
Expanding to Casper
Four Corners opens a second location in Casper to serve Natrona County and the surrounding region, extending reach to Carbon County, Converse County, and Central Wyoming.
Joining the UEWH Family
Four Corners Home Care affiliated with United Energy Workers Healthcare, gaining national clinical resources, expanded benefits navigation support, and the backing of the country’s most experienced EEOICPA and RECA provider network—while keeping its Wyoming identity and local relationships intact.
2025–2026 — The RECA Expansion Window
The 2025 RECA expansion brings thousands of newly eligible Wyoming workers into the program. Four Corners Home Care leads outreach across Fremont County, Natrona County, Carbon County, and beyond—making sure no eligible miner or family member misses this window.
