OPINION & ORDER
[Resolving Doc. 1]
JAMES S. GWIN, District Judge.
Pro se Plaintiff Debra White seeks judicial review of the Social Security Commissioner's denial of her application for disability insurance benefits and supplemental security income.1 Magistrate Judge Kathleen Burke recommends affirming the Commissioner's denial of benefits.2 Plaintiff raises two objections.3
For the following reasons, the Court OVERRULES Plaintiff's first objection and SUSTAINS Plaintiff's second objection. The Court therefore ADOPTS the Magistrate Judge's Report and Recommendation ("R&R") with respect to the first objection but REJECTS the R&R with respect to the second objection. The Court VACATES the Administrative Law Judge's ("ALJ's") decision and REMANDS the case to the ALJ for further proceedings.
I. Background
In April and May 2014, Plaintiff applied for disability insurance benefits and supplemental security income. She alleged that she was disabled as of February 28, 2014.4 She claimed that she suffered from hyperthyroidism (Grave's disease), mediastinal mass, tachycardia, weight loss, hypertension, anxiety, "elevated LFT's," and microcytic anemia.5 After denials by the state agency,6 White requested a hearing.7 On May 25, 2016, ALJ Susan Guiffre conducted a hearing.8
In an August 17, 2016 decision, the ALJ ruled that Plaintiff was not disabled because she could perform her past work as a physical therapy assistant and children institution attendant.9 The appeals council denied review on September 11, 2017, rendering the ALJ's conclusion the Commissioner's final decision.10
On December 15, 2017, White brought the present action seeking review of Commissioner's decision.11 On October 16, 2018, the Magistrate Judge issued an R&R recommending affirmance.12 Plaintiff objects.13
II. Legal Standard
The Federal Magistrates Act requires the Court to review the objected-to portions of the R&R de novo.14 The Court may "accept, reject, or modify, in whole or in part, the findings or recommendations made by the magistrate judge."15
The Court reviews whether the ALJ's decision is "supported by substantial evidence and made pursuant to proper legal standards."16 Substantial evidence is "such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion."17 Substantial evidence is more than a scintilla of evidence, but less than a preponderance.18
To establish disability under the Social Security Act, a plaintiff must demonstrate that they are unable "to engage in any substantial gainful activity by reason of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment which can be expected to result in death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 12 months."19
III. Discussion
A. The ALJ's Decision
The Social Security Administration's regulations outline a five-step process to determine whether a claimant is disabled:
[T]he ALJ asks at step one whether the claimant has been working; at step two, whether the claimant's medical impairments meet the regulations' severity and duration requirements; at step three, whether the medical impairments meet or equal an impairment listed in the regulations; at step four, whether the claimant can perform her past work given the limitations caused by her medical impairments; and at step five, whether the claimant can perform other work.20
Here, at step one the ALJ determined that Plaintiff had not engaged in gainful activity since February 28, 2014.21 At step two, she determined that Plaintiff had two severe impairments— Grave's disease and obesity22—and two non-severe impairments—hypertension and affective disorder.23 At step three, the ALJ determined that Plaintiff did not have an impairment or combination of impairments that met or was medically equal to the severity of the regulations listed impairments.24
After step three, the ALJ determined Plaintiff's residual functional capacity— that is, her ability to perform mental and physical activities despite limitations imposed by her impairments.25 Under the regulations, the ALJ conducted a two-step process. First, the ALJ considered whether Plaintiff had an underlying medical impairment that could produce Plaintiff's claimed pain and symptoms. The ALJ concluded that there was.26 Second, the ALJ considered whether the Plaintiff's statements about the "intensity, persistence, and functionally limiting effects" of her impairment were substantiated by objective medical evidence. Here, the ALJ concluded that they were not.27
For this reason, the ALJ concluded that Plaintiff White had residual functional capacity for "medium" work as defined in the regulations,28 except she could frequently crawl, occasionally climb ramps and stairs, and never climb ladders, ropes, or scaffolds.29
Thus, at step four the ALJ concluded that Plaintiff could perform her past work as a physical therapy assistant and a child institution attendant.30 Because she could perform this work, the ALJ concluded that Plaintiff was not disabled.31
B. Plaintiff's Objections
Like her submissions to the Magistrate Judge,32 Plaintiff's pro se objection is difficult to parse.33 She seems to raise two issues: First, she claims that the physical requirements of her previous physical therapist work are more demanding than the ALJ concluded. Second, she claims that the ALJ only addressed four medical conditions, even though the record showed other medical problems.
i. The Court Overrules Plaintiff's First Objection
In her first objection, Plaintiff states that "I showed proof that the work of a physical therapist requires more work than was stated."34 In support of this argument, she includes several physical therapist job descriptions.35
This objection is not persuasive, because the regulations permit the ALJ to rely upon vocational expert testimony to determine whether Plaintiff could perform her past relevant work.36 At the hearing, the ALJ asked a vocational expert a hypothetical question whether a person with Plaintiff's age, education, past work experience, and Plaintiff's assessed residual functional capacity could perform her past work as a physical therapy assistant.37 The expert gave the opinion that White could. Unless the ALJ's hypothetical was inconsistent with the ALJ's residual functional capacity assessment—which Plaintiff does not argue here—the vocational expert's testimony is substantial evidence supporting the ALJ's conclusion.38
ii. The Court Sustains Plaintiff's Second Objection
Plaintiff's second objection states that "[t]he judge chose to only acknowledge 4 of my medical conditions although the medical reports show a different picture."39 Construed liberally,40 Plaintiff argues the ALJ did not consider all of the record evidence when evaluating whether the medical evidence supported Plaintiff's testimony about the intensity, persistence, and functionally limiting effects of her conditions.41
Agency regulations42 direct ALJs to "consider all of the evidence in an individual's record when they evaluate the intensity and persistence of symptoms after they find that the individual has a medically determinable impairment(s) that could reasonably be expected to produce those symptoms."43 Given this duty to address all relevant record evidence, the ALJ's decision is deficient in two respects.
First, the ALJ's opinion did not address Plaintiff's degenerative spine disease. The administrative record included an October 28, 2014 office treatment record from the Cleveland Clinic Hospital. The office notes x-ray image analysis stated that Plaintiff suffered from "degenerative disc disease of the lower [cervical spine]" and "degenerative disc disease and facet arthritis of the lower lumbar spine degenerative spondylolisthesis of the L4 [spinal segment]."44 At the same clinic visit Plaintiff described shooting pains and numbness in her hands and feet.45
Discussing this record in the decision, the ALJ stated that "[o]n October 28, 2014, the claimant denied chest pain, headache, changes in vision, leg swelling, palpitations, nausea, vomiting, joint pain, muscle pain, syncope, tremors, or cold or heat intolerance."46 This is true enough, but it is hardly right to say that the ALJ "considered" Plaintiff's degenerative spine diagnosis by enumerating all the unrelated symptoms Plaintiff denied at the visit.
Second, the ALJs' opinion summarily discounted Plaintiff's claims that she was experiencing side effects from her medication. Social Security Regulations require the ALJ to consider medication side effects when assessing the severity and persistence of a claimant's symptoms47 and when assessing the claimant's residual functional capacity.48
At the hearing, Plaintiff testified that she was dizzy "all the time" because of the medication she took to manage her Grave's disease.49 She also testified that she reduced and stopped taking her medication, and her pain and dizziness had abated as a result.50
Discussing these claims in her decision, the ALJ remarked that "although the claimant alleged extreme side effects from her thyroid medication, this is not documented in the medical record, as there is no documentation of the claimant complaining to her providers of side effects. The record just shows when she reported decreasing her medication[.]"51
This conclusion is not supported by substantial evidence, as the objective medical evidence in the record documents that Plaintiff suffered unexplained dizziness and nerve pain after she began taking her thyroid medication. On August 12, 2015,52 Plaintiff was hospitalized at Marymount Hospital after passing out in the shower and striking her head. On August 25, 2015, Plaintiff visited Metrohealth Doctor Ikram Khan for a neurological consult.53 At the tilt table test, Plaintiff described "head ache, right eye symptoms, shortness of breath, numbness and tingling in left arm and hand."54 After various negative neurological tests, Dr. Kahn stated that "[f]rom the description looks like vasovagal vs medication related" but also recommended that her doctor "consider changing her medication."55
The ALJ's decision does not discuss Plaintiff's August 12, 2015 hospitalization. It simply states that "[o]n August 12 claimant denied chest pain, shortness of breath, chills, nausea, eye pain, vomiting, or numbness or weakness in the face, arms or legs . . . her heart had regular rate and rhythm . . . [h]er eyes were normal to inspection. She had no acute focal neurological deficits."56 While this is a thorough inventory of the unrelated symptoms Plaintiff denied that day, it does not demonstrate that the ALJ considered the objective medical evidence suggesting that Plaintiff had inexplicably passed out in the shower and hit her head that day.
Simply put, dizziness is a known side effect of Plaintiff's thyroid medication and the record evidence supports—not contradicts—Plaintiff's testimony that she suffered potentially disabling dizziness due to her medication.57
To be clear, the Court is not taking issue with the ALJ's weighing of the evidence. If the ALJ had considered Plaintiff's spine diagnoses and side effects and concluded that they were not disabling, the Court would not disturb that conclusion. Here, the ALJ failed to weigh the relevant evidence at all.
IV. Conclusion
For these reasons, the Court OVERRULES Plaintiff's first objection and SUSTAINS Plaintiff's second objection. The Court therefore ADOPTS the Magistrate Judge's R&R with respect to the first objection but REJECTS the R&R with respect to the second objection. The Court VACATES the ALJ's decision and REMANDS the case to the ALJ for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
IT IS SO ORDERED.