G. R. SMITH, Magistrate Judge.
Alleging disability due to migraine headaches, diabetes mellitus, anxiety, depression, chiari malformations, dizziness, and numbness in her arms and legs, plaintiff Sharon Ingram seeks judicial review of the Social Security Commissioner's denial of her application for Disability Insurance benefits (DIB). Doe. 11 at 2.
In social security cases, courts:
Mitchell v. Comm'r, Soc. Sec. Admin., 771 F.3d 780, 782 (11th Cir. 2014).
The burden of proving disability lies with the claimant. Moore v. Barnhart, 405 F.3d 1208, 1211 (11th Cir. 2005). In response to the showing the claimant makes, the ALJ applies
Stone v. Comm'r. of Soc. Sec. Admin., 596 F. App'x, 878, 879 (11th Cir. 2015) (footnote added).
"For DIB claims, a claimant is eligible for benefits where she demonstrates disability on or before the last date for which she [was] insured. 42 U.S.C. § 423(a)(1)(A) (2005). Because [Ingram's] last insured date was December 31, 2010 [(tr. 162)], her DIB appeal requires a showing of disability on or before that date." Moore, 405 F.3d at 1211.
Ingram filed for DIB on December 5, 2010, alleging a disability onset of August 19, 2008. Tr. 12. Following administrative denial, she attended and testified at a hearing on November 8, 2012 before the AU, who later denied her application. Id. Although the ALJ determined that Ingram had not engaged in substantial gainful activity from her alleged onset until her date-last-insured (Tr. 14), he found no severe impairments at step two and thus denied her application. Tr. 19.
Ingram argues that's error. Doe. 11 at 5. She contends that a finding of "not severe" is reserved for "only the most trivial" impairments and that record evidence shows her headaches far exceed that threshold. Id. at 6 (citing McDaniel v. Bowen, 800 F.2d 1026 (11th Cir. 1986)). In particular, Ingram criticizes (1) the "great weight" placed on her primary care physician's January 2011 opinion that she suffered no muscle problems from neurological impairments (doe. 11 at 6; tr. 17); and (2) the ALJ's decision to disregard the 2011 opinions of her treating neurologist and neurosurgeon. Doe. 11 at 6.
The Commissioner notes simply that during the relevant time period (from the onset of disability to the date last insured), nothing in the record supports a severity finding for Ingram's headaches. Doc. 12 at 5. What evidence does support Ingram's claim all dates to after her date last insured and so, says the Commissioner, the ALJ properly gave it no weight (or, at worst, committed harmless error). Id. at 10.
It's true, as Ingram points out, that:
Hinkley v. Astrue, 2011 WL 2144624 at *6-7 (S.D. Ga. May 31, 2011) adopted, 2011 WL 2441831 (S.D. Ga. June 16, 2011).
Nevertheless, the burden remains Ingram's to make that "de minimis" showing. See Moore, 405 F.3d at 1211. As importantly, for DIB claimants like Ingram, she must meet that burden for the time period "on or before the last date for which she [was] insured." Id. If she only puts forth evidence of a severe impairment after her date last insured, the Court must affirm the ALJ's denial. See Demandre v. Califano, 591 F.2d 1088, 1090 (5th Cir. 1979) ("If a claimant becomes disabled after he has lost insured status, his claim must be denied despite his disability."); Douglas v. Comm'r of Soc. Sec., 486 F. App'x 72, 75 (11th Cir. 2012) (same).
The ALJ concluded that Ingram failed to show that her headaches precluded work from her disability's alleged onset until her date last insured. He first noted Ingram' testimony that she received unemployment benefits for the two years after August 2008 — almost the entire time between her alleged disability onset and date last insured. Tr. 15, 41-42. That meant Ingram represented to the State that she was "ready, willing, and able to work but unable to find employment," during the same time period that she now says she was "unable to sustain fulltime employment." Tr. 15. The ALJ found that inconsistency eroded her credibility. Id.
He then found that the medical evidence showed Ingram's headaches are "associated with the onset and progression of her menstrual period," and have "been ongoing since at least 2001." Id. at 15-16; see, e.g., Tr. 249 (March 2007 notes by examining physician Dr. Frances Decker noting that Ingram reported having "menstrual migraines for years," and that they "only [occur] around the time of her period"). As a result, Ingram "engage[d] in substantial gainful activities," until 2008, when she started collecting unemployment benefits. Tr. 16, 40-42. Looking only to medical evidence of impairments pre-dating the last-insured date, the ALJ noted that:
Id.
The ALJ placed great weight on a neurological questionnaire by Ingram's treating neurologist, Dr. W. Scott Bohike, whose "longitudinal treatment relationship with [Ingram]," the ALJ felt, "place[d] him in the best position to evaluate her functional capacity." Tr. 18. That evaluation — conducted less than two weeks after Ingram's date last insured — found no motor impairment from neurological causes. Tr. 309-11. It did not address Ingram's pain from headaches, or any functional impairments she suffered. But because the ALJ also found the evaluation "necessarily addresse[d] the period prior to the date last insured, during which Dr. Bohike treated [Ingram]," he afforded it great weight. Tr. 18.
By contrast, the ALJ gave no weight to the opinion of Dr. Michael Taormina, a neurologist who treated Ingram only after her date last insured, exactly because he only treated her during that demonstrably irrelevant time period. Tr. 18. But there is another opinion, that of neurosurgeon Willard Thompson, which the ALJ failed to mention. Like Taormina, however, Thompson only treated Ingram after her date last insured and nothing in his notes indicates that the severity-related portion of his opinion applied to times before then.
On the basis of that record, the ALJ concluded that "[t]here does not appear to be any change in the severity, frequency, or duration of [Ingram's] headaches through her date last insured." Tr. 17. Put differently, he found that Ingram's headaches remained the same from 2008 to December 31, 2010 (when Ingram never worked), as they were from 2001 until 2008 (when Ingram worked). "Since there was no change . . . and she was able to work, the [ALJ] f[ound] that her migraine headaches have not functionally limited her abilities to perform substantial gainful activities. Consequently, her migraine headaches through her date last insured are nonsevere." Id.
Ingram only points to medical records from 2011 forward to bolster her severity claim. But as noted above, those records do not relate to the relevant time period (onset date — date last insured) and so cannot support a severity finding. See Golf, 253 F. App'x at 921. Without those, all that remains are (1) records from time periods irrelevant to Ingram's DIB application, (2) records showing that Ingram had migraines during the relevant time period no more severe than those she endured while employed (see, e.g, tr. 350 (ER records from August 2010 visit), and (3) the ALJ's negative credibility finding predicated on Ingram's receipt of unemployment benefits at the same time she now claims her headaches rendered her unable to work. Tr. 16. Faced with that, it is reasonable to conclude, as did the AU, that although Ingram's headaches occurred during her menstrual cycle for a long time, they only began to worsen and impinge on her ability to work beginning in 2011 and thus were not severe prior to that point. Cf. Harper v. Astrue, 2010 WL 6897654 at * 9 (N.D. Fla. Sept. 30, 2010) (claimant's migraines were controlled by medications and thus not a severe condition where claimant only occasionally went to the ER for pain treatment, and "only had to leave work a couple of times" over the course of a given year due to their intensity). Since that conclusion is supported by substantial evidence, even given the low bar for severity findings, the Court cannot disturb it.
The ALJ's conclusion that Ingram is "not disabled," tr. 18, therefore should be affirmed and this case