JAMES KNOLL GARDNER, District Judge.
NOW, this 30th day of September, 2014, upon consideration of the following documents:
and after a thorough de novo review of the record in this matter; it appearing that Magistrate Judge Lloert's Report and Recommendation correctly determined the legal issues presented in this case,
Furthermore, district judges have wide latitude regarding how they treat recommendations of the magistrate judge.
As more fully discussed below, I approve and adopt Magistrate Judge Lloret's Report and Recommendation and overrule plaintiff's objections to the Report and Recommendation.
However, the ALJ's decision not to find that plaintiff's cognitive disorder was a severe impairment was supported by substantial evidence. The ALJ acknowledged that Dr. Marija Petrovic, M.D.'s report diagnosed plaintiff with cognitive disorder, and assessed a Global Assessment of Functioning ("GAF") score of 40. A GAF score "measures an individual's psychological, social, and occupational functioning on a hypothetical continuum of mental health/illness on a scale of one to a hundred."
Specifically, as noted in Magistrate Judge Lloret's R&R, the ALJ gave great weight to the psychiatric evaluation of Dr. Harold Graff of the facility where plaintiff went for treatment, when Dr. Graff concluded that plaintiff "may have some mild short term memory loss, but her mental status does not show any severe problems". The ALJ gave great weight to this conclusion because it was consistent with the psychiatric treatment notes, consistent with Dr. Graff's assessed GAF score, consistent with plaintiff's activities of daily living, and consistent with the record as a whole.
Accordingly, the ALJ's decision that plaintiff's cognitive disorder was not a severe impairment is supported by substantial evidence. "An ALJ may reject a treating physician's opinion outright only on the basis of contradictory medical evidence, but may afford a treating physician's opinion more or less weight depending upon the extent to which supporting explanations are provided."
Next, plaintiff objects to the ALJ's reliance on a hypothetical question posed to a vocational expert that did not include the functional limitations which plaintiff argues should have been included based upon her alleged severe cognitive disorder. However, the ALJ was aware of Dr. Petrovik's assessment, and was justified in not including her assessment in the ALJ's hypothetical to the vocational expert because, as discussed above, the ALJ's decision that plaintiff's cognitive disorder was not a severe impairment was supported by substantial evidence.
Accordingly, I approve and adopt Magistrate Judge Lloret's Report and Recommendation and overrule plaintiff's objections to it.