JOHN W. LUNGSTRUM, District Judge.
Plaintiff seeks review of a decision of the Acting Commissioner of Social Security (hereinafter Commissioner) denying Disability Insurance benefits (DIB) under sections 216(i) and 223 of the Social Security Act. 42 U.S.C. §§ 416(i) and 423 (hereinafter the Act). Finding no error in the Administrative Law Judge's (ALJ) decision, the court ORDERS that judgment shall be entered pursuant to the fourth sentence of 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) AFFIRMING that decision.
Plaintiff applied for DIB, alleging disability beginning June 1, 2012. (R. 9, 108). Plaintiff exhausted proceedings before the Commissioner, and now seeks judicial review of the final decision denying benefits. She argues that the ALJ's residual functional capacity (hereinafter RFC) assessment is not supported by the record evidence, that he erroneously relied on the opinion of the consultative examiner, Dr. White, and that he improperly evaluated Plaintiff's credibility.
The court's review is guided by the Act.
The court may "neither reweigh the evidence nor substitute [its] judgment for that of the agency."
The Commissioner uses the familiar five-step sequential process to evaluate a claim for disability. 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520;
The Commissioner next evaluates steps four and five of the sequential process— determining at step four whether, in light of the RFC assessed, claimant can perform her past relevant work; and at step five whether, when also considering the vocational factors of age, education, and work experience, claimant is able to perform other work in the economy.
The court addresses each argument in the order presented in Plaintiff's Brief, and finds no error in the ALJ's decision.
Plaintiff first argues that "the substantial evidence of record supports a finding that Ms. Stallings is unable to perform the standing and walking required of light work." (Pl. Br. 14). This is so, in Plaintiff's view, because of her long history of degenerative joint disease and osteoarthritis of the knees requiring injections and oral pain medication and eventually resulting in a total replacement of her left knee, and because of her testimony of missing at least two days at work each month.
The Commissioner argues that the ALJ properly considered all of the evidence in assessing RFC. She points to record evidence which supports the ALJ's RFC assessment, including minimal treatment; examination findings of abilities to squat and rise and perform other postural movements without difficulty, no effusion, no knee instability, and 4/5 strength; examination findings before left knee replacement of near normal range of motion, mild swelling, mild misalignment, ability to perform postural movements without difficulty, and absence of effusion, reported relief with injections and oral medications; improvement after left knee surgery with no instability; and normal alignment, no instability, and only slightly reduced strength in the right knee. (Comm'r Br. 8-10).
In her Reply Brief, Plaintiff argues again that "the ALJ did not consider all of the relevant evidence of record including Ms. Stallings[`s] medical history, effects of treatment, lay evidence, and recorded observations." (Reply 1). She once again appeals to her long history of osteoarthritis and osteoarthrosis, osteophyte spurring, patellar grinding, and knee injections,
As is usually the situation in a Social Security disability case, the record evidence here is equivocal. There is evidence supporting a finding of "disabled" and there is evidence supporting a finding of "not disabled." It is the ALJ's duty to weight that evidence and decide the issue of disability. It is not enough for the claimant to point to evidence which is contrary to the ALJ's decision and assert error. She must show that the ALJ's rationale is erroneous or that the record evidence cannot support the decision reached. "The possibility of drawing two inconsistent conclusions from the evidence does not prevent an administrative agency's findings from being supported by substantial evidence. [The court] may not displace the agency's choice between two fairly conflicting views, even though the court would justifiably have made a different choice had the matter been before it de novo."
Here, Plaintiff has not shown erroneous reasoning or that the evidence cannot support the ALJ's decision. The fact that Plaintiff has pain in her knees, that she had a knee replacement to help to alleviate that pain, or that she no longer has
Plaintiff's appeal to the notes of her last physical therapy session does not require a different conclusion. Plaintiff's argument that she was unable to "traverse a single flight of stairs or walk a distance without an assistive device" (Pl. Br. 15) (citing R. 289), is apparently based upon the outpatient physical therapy long term goals—that Plaintiff would ambulate "community distances" with no assistive device and with no gait deviations, and that Plaintiff would "go up/down 1 flight of stairs." (R. 289). First, the treatment note states with regard to going up and down a single flight of stairs that the "goal [was] met."
Similarly, the physical therapy note's reference to a "Modified Independent" ambulation level with gait deviations due to lacking functional knee extension during gait (R. 290) does not require limitations in addition to those assessed by the ALJ. The ALJ found that Plaintiff can only occasionally climb ramps and stairs, and that she should never climb ladders, ropes, or scaffolds, or crawl. (R. 12). The physical therapy notes do not define "modified independent" ambulation level and do not specify what is lacking in functional knee extension during gait. At that time, Plaintiff had demonstrated that she was able to go up and down a flight of stairs, she was being released from physical therapy, and from what the evidence shows she was mobile at least when using a cane. While the evidence cited might be accepted as providing additional limitations, it does not specify such limitations, such limitations are not apparent from the physical therapy notes or from the other evidence, the ALJ may not speculate regarding what such non-specific limitations are, and the evidence as a whole does not require such limitations.
Plaintiff's argument that the ALJ did not consider all of the relevant evidence is likewise unavailing. The decision reveals that the ALJ considered and provided a fair summary of all of the record evidence. Although the ALJ did not specifically mention or cite to every piece of evidence, that is not required, and Plaintiff does not point to particular, material evidence that was ignored. The ALJ stated that he had carefully considered all of the record evidence. (R. 9, 11, 12, 13). The court's general practice is to take a lower tribunal at its word when it says it has considered a matter.
Plaintiff claims error in the ALJ's evaluation of the report of a consultative examination performed by Dr. White, arguing that it was a one-time examination "without the benefit of any of Ms. Stallings's prior medical record," and that the ALJ knew that merely ten months after Dr. White examined Ms. Stallings, she received a total knee replacement. (Pl. Br. 16). The Commissioner notes that Dr. White examined Plaintiff and concluded that she had no exertional limitations, but that the ALJ nonetheless gave Plaintiff the benefit of the doubt, found that her knee impairments were severe within the meaning of the Act, and assessed an RFC for a limited range of light work. She points out that it is not error when an ALJ tempers the extremes of a medical opinion for the benefit of a claimant. (Comm'r Br. 9-10) (citing
Plaintiff has shown no error in the ALJ's evaluation of Dr. White's opinion. As a preliminary matter, the court notes that the evidence does not support Plaintiff's assertion that Dr. White formed his opinion without the benefit of prior medical records. Dr. White's report specifically states that he "reviewed the attached medical records." (R. 232). The court will not merely accept Plaintiff's assertion over the contrary statement of Dr. White.
The ALJ stated that he had "considered opinion evidence in accordance with the requirements of 20 CFR 404.1527 and SSRs [(Social Security Rulings)] 96-2p, 96-5p, 96-6p and 06-3p" (R. 13), and Plaintiff does not argue otherwise. The ALJ summarized Dr. White's report of his examination of Plaintiff and explained the weight he accorded Dr. White's medical opinion. (R. 16). And, he explained that he accorded no weight to the opinion of the single decisionmaker (SDM) who had decided the case at the initial level for the state disability determination service.
Plaintiff claims the ALJ erred in evaluating the credibility of Plaintiff's allegation of symptoms resulting from her impairments. She argues this is so because the ALJ mischaracterized her testimony, failed to accord appropriate weight to her "strong work history," failed to consider the reason for Plaintiff's lack of medical treatment between June 2012 and May 2014, and found, inconsistently, both that Plaintiff's allegations are only partially credible and that her willingness to undergo knee surgery suggests that her symptoms were genuine. The Commissioner, argues that review of a credibility determination is deferential, points to the reasons given by the ALJ to find Plaintiff's allegations only partially credible, and explains how that in her view those reasons are supported by the record evidence. She seems to admit that the ALJ's rationale relating to secondary gain is erroneous, but argues that any error in that regard is harmless because "the ALJ gave numerous valid reasons to support his subjective symptom assessment." (Comm'r Br. 18).
The court's review of an ALJ's credibility determination is deferential. It is generally treated as binding on review.
Therefore, in reviewing an ALJ's credibility determinations, the court will usually defer to the ALJ on matters involving witness credibility.
The ALJ determined Plaintiff's allegations of limitations resulting from her symptoms "are not entirely credible" (R. 13), and explained his rationale in that regard.
Plaintiff primarily argues that the ALJ misunderstood and mischaracterized the evidence, and therefore reached the wrong credibility determination. This is little more than a request that the court reevaluate the credibility of Plaintiff's allegations and substitute its credibility determination for that of the ALJ. But, as noted above the court may not reweigh the evidence and substitute its judgment for that of the Commissioner,
In seeking such reconsideration, Plaintiff argues that she did not testify that she could not bend her knee at all, but rather that bending her knee was limited, and that she did not testify that she never saw swelling in her knees, but rather that she never really knew they were swollen until medical personnel told her. (Pl. Br. 18). Plaintiff is technically correct in both arguments, but she misses the point of the ALJ's discussion. The ALJ's point is that the medical examinations, other than immediately following knee surgery, showed little to no limitation in Plaintiff's knee range of motion, whereas Plaintiff testified she had little ability to bend her knees and was consequently unable to carry anything up or down stairs. The evidence supports the ALJ's finding. Moreover, even if the ALJ did erroneously understand Plaintiff to argue that she could not bend her knees at all, that error, if any, was invited by Plaintiff. In questioning the vocational expert, Plaintiff's counsel asked, "If one was unable to stoop
With regard to swelling in Plaintiff's knees, the ALJ was correct in noting that the knee swelling was so mild that, as Plaintiff admitted, she did not observe it independently until the medical personnel noted it. The point the ALJ was making was not that Plaintiff did not experience these symptoms to any degree, but that the symptoms were not as severe as alleged, and that Plaintiff was exaggerating her symptoms and limitations.
Similarly, Plaintiff makes much of the ALJ's note that Plaintiff "may have been using her alleged knee pain for secondary gain" (R. 15) when she fell at work, and when released to return to work refused to do so without a second opinion. But the record supports the ALJ's inference. While Plaintiff argues that it was "not unreasonable" to seek a second opinion because her physician had her past medical records and took "new x-rays which revealed chronic degenerative changes in both knees" (Pl. Br. 19), her argument demonstrates the ALJ's point, and that point is supported by the record evidence.
Plaintiff was working full-time when she fell and received a work injury, and she continued to work for three months thereafter until her workplace closed. (R. 13). After falling at work, she was seen by the workers compensation physician who prescribed 800 mg ibuprofen tablets and released her to return to work. (R. 188). She wanted a second opinion and went to see her primary care physician who stopped the ibuprofen and prescribed hydrocodone-acetaminophen tablets, explained to her that there was low suspicion of fracture, but nevertheless ordered x-rays at Plaintiff's request, and released her to return to work as the workers compensation physician had done. (R. 189).
As Plaintiff admits, she had been working before her workplace fall despite pain and treatment for degenerative joint disease in the bilateral knees. The workers compensation physician treated her for the additional pain resulting from her workplace fall, determined that the potential of further injury was minimal if any, and released her to return to work. But, as the ALJ noted, Plaintiff used her knee pain for secondary gain to remain off work until she received a second opinion. As Plaintiff argues, the x-rays taken by her physician revealed degenerative changes in both knees, but that information was already known to Plaintiff and to her physician, and was not the result of the workplace fall. What is relevant in this context is that both physicians felt the low suspicion of fracture did not justify knee x-rays, and when taken, the x-rays confirmed that "[t]he bony structures appear intact and there is no evidence of fracture or displacement." (R. 204). While the ALJ specifically noted that the fact of seeking secondary gain "does not determine the case at hand, it is relevant to the claimant's credibility" (R. 15), and it is not error to consider it in that regard.
Finally, the ALJ did not make inconsistent findings by recognizing that Plaintiff's willingness to undergo surgery suggests that her symptoms are genuine while finding that her allegations of symptoms are only partially credible. As Plaintiff's Brief suggests, the ALJ should consider a non-exhaustive list of factors in determining the credibility of a claimant's allegations of limitations resulting from her impairments. (Pl. Br. 17);
Plaintiff has shown no error in the credibility determination. Giving it the deference it is due, the court finds no error.
SSR 16-3p was not in effect when this case was decided, the court's review is directed to the final decision made by the agency, and the court may not make a