
Christy Dunn and Matt Gray, Young Moore and Henderson, P.A.
In this training program, long-term care attorneys will help you increase the likelihood of successful appeals of deficiencies through IDR by preparing for the IDR like you would prepare a legal case. The presenters will show you how to build a cogent narrative and compile the most relevant evidence into organized exhibits, in order to most effectively show regulators how the facility met the requirements.
Christy Dunn concentrates her practice on civil litigation, employment law, and insurance law. Christy advises long-term care facilities on compliance and employment law matters. She advises and represents employers and electric membership corporations in civil litigation and employment matters. Christy also advises insurance companies on insurance coverage and represents them bad-faith litigation. Before obtaining her law degree, Christy spent 13 years working as a sales engineer consulting with end users, engineers, and contractors to design, sell, and install power protection and precision cooling solutions for data centers and industrial applications. Christy earned a BS in Business Administration from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and earned her law degree magna cum laude from Campbell Law School. While in law school, Christy interned in the Office of the Solicitor General of North Carolina and for The Honorable J. Douglas McCullough at the North Carolina Court of Appeals. Before joining Young Moore, she clerked for The Honorable Allegra Collins at the North Carolina Court of Appeals.
Matthew Gray represents and advises long-term care facilities, corporations, and individuals. His practice includes long-term care claims, complex insurance coverage analysis and counseling, bad-faith litigation, employment counseling and litigation, and administrative law. Matt’s long-term care practice includes defending long-term care facilities against claims of medical negligence and assisting with regulatory investigations. Matt has extensive experience defending long-term care negligence claims in both state and federal trial and appellate courts in North Carolina. Matt received his undergraduate degree in Business Management from North Carolina State University in 1998. After graduating, he worked as a title insurance underwriter for two years before attending Wake Forest University School of Law.