JOHN E. STEELE, Senior District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on consideration of Magistrate Judge Carol Mirando's Report and Recommendation (Doc. #25), filed on July 28, 2018, recommending that the Decision of the Commissioner be affirmed. Plaintiff filed Objections to the Report and Recommendation (Doc. #26) on August 13, 2018. The Commissioner did not file a response, and the time to do so has expired. For the reasons set forth below, the objections are overruled, the Report and Recommendation is accepted, and the decision of the Commissioner is affirmed.
The Court reviews the Commissioner's decision to determine if it is supported by substantial evidence and based upon proper legal standards.
After a remand from the Appeals Council (Doc. #16-2, Tr. 15), an administrative law judge (ALJ) found that plaintiff had not engaged in substantial gainful activity since January 2, 2009, the date claimed as the onset of her disability. (
At a September 3, 2015, hearing plaintiff was a 56 years old woman living alone. (
The ALJ found that plaintiff was unable to perform her past relevant work, but that that there are jobs that exist in significant numbers in the national economy that plaintiff could perform after considering her age, education, work experience, and residual functional capacity. (Doc. #16-2, Tr. 27-28.) A vocational expert testified that plaintiff could be a hand packager (medium, unskilled work), mold filler (medium, unskilled), price marker (light, unskilled work), and laundry classifier (light, unskilled work). (
Plaintiff raised seven issues in her federal court appeal of the ALJ's Decision. (Doc. #25, p. 2.) Plaintiff asserts the ALJ improperly failed to identify plaintiff's vision and musculoskeletal impairments as "severe" impairments, and failed to consider these impairments in the evaluation of plaintiff's RFC. Plaintiff also takes issue with the ALJ's finding that she could perform work at all exertional levels, and the minimal weight the ALJ accorded to her GAF scores. Plaintiff also asserts that the ALJ erred in finding she could perform jobs that allow being off task 5% of the workday, in addition to regularly scheduled breaks. Finally, plaintiff asserts that substantial evidence did not support the ALJ's finding that the identified jobs are consistent with plaintiff's RFC, and the finding that there exist a substantial number of jobs that plaintiff can perform.
The Report and Recommendation found against plaintiff on all issues, and recommended affirmance of the ALJ's Decision. In sum, the Magistrate Judge found that the ALJ properly evaluated plaintiff's visual impairments as non-severe, and that substantial evidence supported the ALJ's decision to afford little weight to Dr. Lewis' vision evaluation form, which was inconsistent with Dr. Lewis' own treatment notes. The Magistrate Judge agreed with the ALJ that Dr. Lewis' opinion that plaintiff's ability to read would be substantially reduced by the vision impairments was undermined by his statement that the ability to write or follow written instructions would not be affected.
The Magistrate Judge found that substantial evidence supported the ALJ's findings that plaintiff did not have a "medically determinable impairment" of Reiter's syndrome because Mr. Cetin, a Physician Assistant, was the "provider" who assessed Reiter's syndrome, not Dr. Patel, who simply signed the treatment note. Additionally, if this was a medically determinable impairment, the Magistrate Judge found that substantial evidence supported the ALJ's determination that the musculoskeletal issues and impairments were not severe. Alternatively, the Magistrate Judge found the ALJ's vision and musculoskeletal determinations were harmless error because, having found plaintiff suffered from thirteen severe impairments, the ALJ proceeded beyond step two of the sequential evaluation process.
The Magistrate Judge found that the ALJ's RFC findings were supported by substantial evidence because plaintiff's subjective comments were properly weighed against the record, and that the "ALJ's thorough, well-articulated findings" supported the finding that plaintiff could perform work at all exertional levels. (Doc. #25, p. 25.) The Magistrate Judge also noted that the record contains a large variety of GAF scores ranging from 1 to 55 between 2009 and 2012. The Magistrate Judge found that the ALJ'S conclusion that the scores were not consistent with the record as a whole was supported by substantial evidence.
As to job numbers, the Magistrate Judge found that the vocational expert thoroughly explained how the job numbers were determined, and nothing in the testimony suggested that the vocational expert relied on numbers for the OES groups. The Magistrate Judge found that substantial evidence supported the step five determination. The Magistrate Judge found that the limitation for simple work was not inconsistent with a reasoning level of up to 3 for unskilled work, and the four identified jobs were unskilled jobs with a specific vocational profile of 1 or 2. The Magistrate Judge noted that the ALJ was permitted to rely on the vocational expert's testimony, and plaintiff's counsel did not raise any conflict between the testimony and the DOT.
Plaintiff's objections relate to five of the issues: The ALJ's findings that vision and musculoskeletal issues were not severe impairments; the failure to consider these impairments in the evaluation of the RFC; the finding of an ability to perform work at all exertional levels; and the consideration of the GAF scores.
Plaintiff argues that the ALJ erred in failing to determine that her vision problems constituted a severe impairment, and in failing to consider this severe impairment in the RFC determination. Plaintiff asserts that the vision problems clearly affected her ability to perform work functions, and should have been found severe. Plaintiff argues that "vision problems motivated the ALJ to prohibit commercial driving" (Doc. #26, p. 2), and that the ALJ should have contacted the treating physician (Dr. Lewis) if he found that the opinion was ambiguous.
On August 19, 2015, Dr. Lewis completed a Vision Evaluation form and diagnosed plaintiff with astigmatism, presbyopia, and early cataract. (Doc. #16-12, Tr. 634.) Dr. Lewis indicated that plaintiff's vision impairment substantially affected her capacity to perform reading and driving in her daily activities, and that plaintiff's vision substantially affected her near vision. (
The medical records provide substantial support for the ALJ's finding of non-severe vision impairment. The objection is overruled.
Plaintiff argues that the ALJ failed to assess the severity of the Reiter's syndrome because it was not found to be medically determinable. Plaintiff asserts, however, that her musculoskeletal impairment was severe because Dr. Patel's signature on the treatment record diagnosing Reiter's syndrome adopted the diagnosis. Plaintiff argues that this was not harmless error because the physical limitations were not considered in the RFC evaluation.
The ALJ noted that plaintiff told the nurse practitioner that the emergency room doctor told her she had Reiter's syndrome, and the nurse practitioner diagnosed degenerative joint disease. (Doc. #16-2, Tr. 24.) The Community Care Family Clinic office visit notes state that the source for the history of "reiters syndrome" was the patient. Just prior to this visit, plaintiff was seen at the Desoto Memorial Hospital for burning with urination, joint pain, and drainage from her left eye. (
Plaintiff argues that the ALJ's assessment that plaintiff could perform work at all exertional levels fails to reflect the frequent assessments of arthritis, Reiter's syndrome, mitral valve collapse, cardiac arrhythmia, chronic pain, degenerative joint disease, history of low back pain, history of seizures, and arm/wrist surgery. (Doc. #26, p. 7.) This finding, plaintiff argues, is unsupported because medium work requires the ability to lift up to 50 pounds occasionally, and 25 pounds frequently, and plaintiff's testimony contradicts the finding. However, the record reflects that the ALJ clearly rejected plaintiff's credibility based on her contradictory testimony regarding daily activities. (Doc. #16-2, Tr. 25-26.) The finding that plaintiff's impairments do not restrict her ability to work at this level is supported by substantial evidence. The objections are overruled.
Plaintiff argues that her inability to afford ongoing treatment and failing to receive ongoing treatment is entirely consistent with the low GAF scores, and the ALJ's contrary finding rejecting the value of the GAF scores is unsupported. The Court finds that the ALJ clearly articulated that the scores were "grossly" inconsistent with the medical evidence and the lack of consistent, ongoing treatment. Therefore, the ALJ provided support for giving the GAF scores only minimal weight. (Doc. #16-2, Tr. 26.) The objection is overruled.
After an independent review, the Court agrees fully with the findings and recommendations in the Report and Recommendation.
Accordingly, it is now
1. The Report and Recommendation (Doc. #25) is
2. Plaintiff's Objection (Doc. #26) is
3. The Decision of the Commissioner of Social Security is
4. The Clerk of the Court shall enter judgment accordingly and close the file.