Cody started her Paralympic career representing the United States in
wheelchair basketball at the
1984 Summer Paralympics. Cody competed in athletics in her second Paralympic Games and won four silver medals at the
1988 Summer Paralympics in Seoul, Korea. At her final Paralympic Games, Cody won a gold and a bronze at the
1992 Summer Paralympics in Barcelona, Spain while helping set a world record in the 4 × 100 m relay. She was responsible for writing and securing passage of IPC's gender equity policy at the 2003 general assembly. As Chair of the IPC women in sport committee she developed an IPC report card on gender equity to reflect the rate of women in leadership positions across IPC, sports federations, and NPCs and set targets for increasing the number of women athletes competing in summer and winter Games. Women made up 40% of the athletes competing at the 2021 Tokyo Paralympic Games compared to just 25% in the 2000 Paralympics in Sydney, Australia. Outside of the Paralympics, Cody appeared at the
1988 Summer Olympics in
wheelchair racing. She won the 1989
Chicago Marathon and 1990
Los Angeles Marathon in the women's wheelchair division. Cody also won the wheelchair division of the
1990 Chicago Marathon. Alternatively, Cody has held positions in the non-profit, business, and public sectors. She was a venue director for the 1996 Atlanta Paralympic Organizing Committee. Cody was vice president with Sagamore Associates now Faegre Drinker the government affairs consulting firm from 1999 to 2007. At
BlazeSports America she designed and led a campaign to increase interscholastic sports offerings for students with disabilities. Currently, Cody works at the
United States Department of State in the
Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor. == Awards and honors ==