Frazier v. Berryhill
Filing
25
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order Signed by the Honorable Michael T. Mason on 1/10/2019.(rbf, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
CLARA FRAZIER,
Plaintiff,
v.
NANCY A. BERRYHILL, Acting
Commissioner of Social Security,
Defendant.
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No. 17 C 8484
Magistrate Judge Michael T. Mason
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff, Clara Frazier (“Frazier” or “claimant”), has brought a motion for summary
judgment [12] seeking judicial review of the final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security
(“Commissioner”) denying her claim for disability insurance benefits and supplemental security
income under the Social Security Act (“Act”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 416(i) and 423(d). The Commissioner
filed a cross-motion for summary judgment asking that we uphold the decision. [19]. We have
jurisdiction to hear this matter pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 405(g). For the reasons set forth below,
claimant’s motion is granted, and the Commissioner’s motion is denied. This case is remanded to
the Social Security Administration for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
I.
BACKGROUND
A.
Procedural History
Frazier filed her application for disability benefits on February 13, 2014, alleging that her
disability began on August 15, 2013. (R. 199-205.) She later amended the onset date to October
10, 2015. (R. 103.) Frazier’s application was denied initially on May 20, 2014, and again on
reconsideration on March 9, 2015. (R. 121-25, 131-38.) Frazier then requested a hearing before
an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”), which was held on August 9, 2016. (R. 18-55.) At the
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hearing, both Frazier and Vocational Expert (“VE”) Gary Wilhelm testified. No medical expert
appeared. The ALJ issued a decision denying benefits on November 8, 2016. (R. 101-14.) The
Appeals Council (“AC”) granted review and issued a September 19, 2017 decision that was
unfavorable to Frazier, making it the Commissioner’s final decision. (R. 408.) 20 C.F.R. §
404.981. Claimant subsequently filed this action in the district court on November 22, 2017.
B.
The Relevant Medical Evidence
Frazier was involved in an accident while driving a school bus on August 15, 2013 that she
claims required her to stop working due to pain in her back and lower extremities. A cervical xray dated August 15, 2013 showed mild degenerative changes throughout her neck without any
acute abnormalities. (R. 309-10.) Frazier was diagnosed with neck and back strain and was
referred to physical therapy. (R. 312.) On October 11, 2013, she consulted Dr. Anil Kesani,
claiming that her lower back pain had become much worse since the accident despite undergoing
four weeks of therapy. (R. 322.) The pain radiated from the lower back into her legs and was
increased by sitting, bending, lifting, or twisting. (Id.) Frazier had already undergone an MRI of
her lumbar spine that showed multilevel degenerative disc disease, degenerative facet arthrosis
with hypertrophy at L4-L5 and L5-S1, disc bulging at L3-L4 and L4-L5, and foraminal narrowing
at L5-S1.
(R. 554.)
Dr. Kesani assessed sciatica, degeneration and displacement of the
lumbosacral disc, and lumbosacral spondylosis. (Id.) The doctor started Frazier on gabapentin
and naproxen and prescribed physical therapy. (R. 323.)
Frazier reported little improvement in her symptoms when she next saw Dr. Kesani on
November 8, 2013. (R. 324-25.) As a result, the doctor added Tylenol #3 to her pain medication,
and on December 6 also prescribed Prednisone and Flexeril. (R. 325, 327.) By March 17, 2014,
Frazier reported that her back pain had not improved, and her leg pain was worse. (R. 332.) Dr.
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Kesani had referred Frazier to a pain specialist in 2013, but she reported in March 2014 that her
insurance company had not approved the consultation. (Id.) That remained the case throughout
2014 and up to Dr. Kesani’s last treatment note dated February 11, 2015. (R. 552.)
After multiple trips to the emergency room in 2014 and 2015 for back pain, Frazier began
treatment on November 4, 2015 with orthopedist Dr. Cara Thomas. Dr. Thomas noted decreased
sensation in Frazier’s lumbar spine, 4/5 strength in her right hip flexion, and a positive straight leg
raise of the right leg. (R. 643.) Dr. Thomas noted the same symptoms on November 15 and
recommended an EMG/nerve conduction study. (R. 639.) The results of the EMG study were
abnormal.
Dr. Amir El Shami noted that the EMG showed symmetric axonal peripheral
polyneuropathy (an injury to multiple peripheral nerves) and suggested chronic L5-S1
radiculopathy (a compression of the spinal nerve). (R. 655.) Orthopedist Dr. James Haeberlin
confirmed those findings when he saw Frazier on January 14, 2016. (R. 636-37.) Dr. Haeberlin
noted that Frazier had numbness, tingling, and weakness in her right leg. Like Dr. Thomas, Dr.
Haeberlin assessed 4/5 strength in Frazier’s right leg and assessed decreased sensation in the
lumbar spine. (R. 637.)
On January 12, February 9, February 23, and March 7, 2016, Frazier sought emergency
treatment for back pain at the Metro South Emergency Room. She stated during her March 7 visit
that she had been experiencing pain radiating into her leg. (R. 761.) Doctors prescribed Flexeril,
Norco, and Prednisone for Frazier’s pain and released her from the hospital. (R. 762.) She then
treated with Dr. Alex Behar on March 11, 2016. Dr. Behar noted that she complained of constant
pain at a level of 10 out of 10, “with needles going down all the way to her toes.” (R. 645.) A
physical examination showed that Frazier had positive slump tests that caused pain to extend
through her toes bilaterally. (Id.) Frazier was referred to a pain clinic for an epidural injection,
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and her gabapentin dose was increased from 300 mg. up to 1,200 mg. a day for a period of time.
(R. 645-46.) Frazier told another treater on April 6 that the increase in gabapentin had not helped
her pain and that it made her “high and sleepy.” (R. 648.). Following several trips to the
emergency room for back pain in April and May, Frazier underwent an MRI for her lumbar spine
on August 22, 2016.
It revealed an extensive spinal lipomatosis (a fat accumulation that
compresses the epidural space) that, in combination with other degenerative changes, caused spinal
canal and neural foraminal stenosis at L4-L5 and L5-S1. (R. 670.)
C.
The State Agency Experts
Two non-examining experts provided assessments of the effects that Frazier’s impairments
had on her ability to work. On May 19, 2014, Dr. Towfig Armand concluded that Frazier had the
residual functional capacity (“RFC”) to carry out light work as that term is defined in 20 C.F.R. §
404.1567(b) as long as various exertional and environmental restrictions were applied. Dr.
Armand stated that Frazier would be limited to occasional stooping, crawling, and climbing of
ladders, ropes and scaffolds,. She would also need to avoid concentrated exposure to fumes, odors,
dusts, and gases. (R. 59-61.) Dr. Michael Nenaber agreed with those conclusions on March 4,
2015, except that he found that Frazier had an unlimited ability to climb ramps and stairs. (R. 7484.)
D. Claimant’s Testimony
At the August 9, 2016 administrative hearing, Frazier testified that she was injured in
August 2013 when a car struck the school bus that she was driving. (R. 24.) Although she also
suffered from hypertension and asthma, Frazier told the ALJ that her back pain related to the
vehicle accident was the primary reason why she could not work. (R. 28.) She underwent several
weeks of physical therapy after the accident, though it had little effect on her back pain. (R. 32.)
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Frazier explained that her early treatment options were limited; she had been referred to an
orthopedist by a “company doctor,” but she was unable to continue with therapy or other treatment
options because she lacked medical insurance. Workers compensation, which was her primary
source of treatment, would not approve more aggressive treatment. (R. 32-33.) When her back
pain worsened in 2015, however, Frazier was able to seek out other medical care because she was
covered by Medicaid at that point. (R. 32.)
Frazier testified that she experiences pain every day that radiates from her lower back to
the soles of her feet. (R. 33.) Gabapentin helped to control her pain at first, but it is no longer
effective. (Id.) Frazier described her leg pain as a burning sensation that requires her to use a cane
just to stand. (R. 36.) She can stand for 10 minutes with the cane and sit comfortably for up to 25
minutes at a time. (Id.) Frazier told the ALJ that she can only walk for half a block, though her
inability to walk further was a function of breathing problems related to asthma instead of leg pain.
(R. 41.) Frazier described her activities of daily living (“ADL”) as limited. She can bathe and
dress herself “a little bit,” but she is no longer to make her bed or do any housework. (R. 37-38.)
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
This Court will affirm the ALJ’s decision if it is supported by substantial evidence and is
free from legal error. 42 U.S.C. § 405(g); Steele v. Barnhart, 290 F.3d 936, 940 (7th Cir. 2002).
Substantial evidence is more than a scintilla of evidence; it is “such relevant evidence as a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Diaz v. Chater, 55 F.3d 300,
305 (7th Cir. 1995) (quoting Richardson v. Perales, 402 U.S. 389, 401 (1971)). In our review, we
must consider the entire administrative record, but will not ‘re-weigh evidence, resolve conflicts,
decide questions of credibility, or substitute our own judgment for that of the Commissioner.”
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Lopez v. Barnhart, 336 F.3d 535, 539 (7th Cir. 2003) (citing Clifford v. Apfel, 227 F.3d 863, 869
(7th Cir. 2000)). This Court will “conduct a critical review of the evidence” and will not let the
Commissioner’s decision stand “if it lacks evidentiary support or an adequate discussion of the
issues.” Lopez, 336 F.3d at 539 (quoting Steele, 290 F.3d at 940).
In addition, while the ALJ “is not required to address every piece of evidence,” she “must
build an accurate and logical bridge from the evidence to [her] conclusion.” Clifford, 227 F.3d at
872. The ALJ must “sufficiently articulate [her] assessment of the evidence to assure us that the
ALJ considered the important evidence . . . [and to enable] us to trace the path of the ALJ’s
reasoning.” Carlson v. Shalala, 999 F.2d 180, 181 (7th Cir. 1993) (per curium) (quoting Stephens
v. Heckler, 766 F.2d 284, 287 (7th Cir. 1985)).
B. Analysis under the Social Security Act
To qualify for disability benefits, a claimant must be “disabled” under the Act. A person
is disabled under the Act if “he or she has an inability to engage in any substantial gainful activity
by reason of a medically determinable physical or mental impairment which . . . lasted or can be
expected to last for a continuous period of not less than twelve months.” 42 U.S.C. § 423(d)(1)(A).
In determining whether a claimant is disabled, the ALJ must consider the following five-step
inquiry: “(1) whether the claimant is currently employed, (2) whether the claimant has a severe
impairment, (3) whether the claimant’s impairment is one that the Commissioner considers
conclusively disabling, (4) if the claimant does not have a conclusively disabling impairment,
whether she can perform her past relevant work, and (5) whether the claimant is capable of
performing any work in the national economy.” Dixon v. Massanari, 270 F.3d 1171, 1176 (7th
Cir. 2001). The claimant has the burden of establishing a disability at steps one through four.
Zurawski v. Halter, 245 F.3d 881, 885-86 (7th Cir. 2001). At step five, the burden shifts to the
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Commissioner to show that the “claimant is capable of performing work in the national economy.”
Id. at 886.
The ALJ followed this five-step analysis in denying Frazier’s claim for benefits. 1 At step
one, she found that Frazier had not engaged in substantial gainful activity since her amended onset
date of October 10, 2015. (R. 103.) Frazier’s severe impairments at step two were degenerative
disc disease with right lower extremity radiculopathy, axonal peripheral polyneuropathy,
hypertension, and asthma. (Id.) The ALJ concluded at step three that none of these impairments
met or medically equaled a listed impairment, either singly or in combination. (R. 105-06.) Before
moving to step four, the ALJ considered Frazier’s statements concerning the frequency and
severity of her symptoms, finding that medical evidence did not fully support Frazier’s testimony.
She reasoned that the limitations that Frazier described about her ADLs could not be objectively
verified, and that it was not clear that any limitations that she experienced resulted from her
medical condition. (R. 111.) The ALJ also assigned substantial weight to the findings of the stateagency experts Dr. Armand and Dr. Nenaber that Frazier had the RFC to carry out light work,
though with greater restrictions than either of these experts thought were necessary. These
restrictions included findings that Frazier could never climb ropes and ladders; could occasionally
stoop, crawl, balance, crouch, climb ramps and stairs; could frequently reach overhead; could
occasionally be exposed to fumes and other environmental irritants; and required a sit/stand option
that permitted Frazier to sit for five minutes after standing for one hour, or stand for five minutes
after sitting for an hour. (R. 106.) Based on these findings and the testimony of a vocational
As noted earlier, the AC’s September 29, 2017 decision denying DIB and SSI to Frazier is the Commissioner’s final
decision. The AC granted review of the ALJ’s November 8, 2016 decision because Frazier submitted 26 pages of
medical records to the AC that the ALJ did not have an opportunity to review. These include medical records from
the University of Illinois dated April 6, 2016 through July 15, 2016. (R. 5-6.) The Commissioner concedes that the
AC’s decision is “identical” to the ALJ’s, (Doc. 20 at p. 4.), and both parties’ motions address the ALJ’s findings
instead of the AC’s more limited discussion of Frazier’s condition. The Court therefore addresses the reasons for
denying benefits set out in the ALJ’s opinion instead of the AC’s written decision.
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expert, the ALJ determined at step four that Frazier could perform her past relevant work as a
school bus driver. (R. 111.) Accordingly, the ALJ concluded that Frazier was not disabled through
the date of the ALJ’s decision without moving to step five. (R. 112-13.)
Frazier now argues that the ALJ’s decision is erroneous because (1) the ALJ did not
properly assess what Frazier stated about the frequency and severity of her symptoms, and (2) the
substantial evidence does not support the RFC assessment. 2
C. The ALJ Failed to Build an Accurate and Logical Bridge From the Evidence to
Her conclusion that the Record Did Not Entirely Support Frazier’s Symptom
Allegations
An ALJ is always required to “build a logical bridge between the evidence and [her]
conclusion” that the record does not support a claimant’s testimony about her symptoms. Villano
v. Astrue, 556 F.3d 558, 562 (7th Cir. 2009). A reviewing court may overturn a symptom analysis
if the ALJ fails to justify her conclusions with specific reasons that are supported by the record.
Cullinan v. Berryhill, 878 F.3d 598, 603 (7th Cir. 2017) (“We will overturn an ALJ’s decision to
discredit a claimant’s alleged symptoms only if the decision is ‘patently wrong,’ meaning that it
lacks explanation or support.”). An ALJ’s analysis should consider the claimant’s daily activities;
the frequency and intensity of her symptoms; the dosage and side effects of medications; nonmedication treatment; factors that aggravate her condition; and functional restrictions that result
from, or are used to treat, the claimant’s symptoms. 20 C.F.R. § 404.1529(c); SSR 16-3p. When
considering a claimant’s symptoms, the ALJ must build a logical bridge between his or her
statements and the record. See Cullinan, 878 F.3d at 603 (“A credibility determination lacks
Frazier also claims that the Commissioner has filed an incomplete administrative record with the Court by failing to
include the additional 26 pages that were submitted to the AC. It is unclear why Frazier has raised this issue, as she
concedes that she is not entitled to remand on that basis. (Doc. 12 at p. 10). Moreover, Frazier fails to identify what
these records contain, what relevance they have to her disability claim, or what prejudice she has experienced because
of their omission. It is well established that such a skeletal argument is waived. See Hernandez v. Cook Cty. Sheriff’s
Office, 634 F.3d 906, 913 (7th Cir. 2011).
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support when it relies on inferences that are not logically based on specific findings and evidence.”)
(citing Murphy v. Colvin, 759 F.3d 811, 816 (7th Cir. 2014)); Villano, 556 F.3d at 562-63
(requiring an analysis of the SSR 96-7p, now the SSR 16-3p, factors as part of a logical bridge for
the credibility analysis).
The ALJ began her analysis of these factors by addressing two aspects of the medical
record that she concluded were inconsistent with the symptoms that Frazier described. The ALJ
pointed out that x-rays taken of Frazier’s lumbar spine after her 2013 accident showed only mild
degenerative changes. (R. 108, 309.) In addition, physical examination findings made in June
2014 were largely benign, and Frazier showed few serious deficiencies during other exams in June
and August 2014. (R. 108.) The ALJ’s reliance on these test results is unavailing because the ALJ
failed to explain what relevance they have to Frazier’s allegation that she suffers from disabling
symptoms. Frazier does not claim that she was disabled during 2013 or 2014, when the x-rays and
exam findings that the ALJ cited were made. Instead, she alleges that she only became disabled
on October 10, 2015 after her condition had worsened following the 2013 bus accident. The fact
that Frazier had been diagnosed in 2013 and 2014 with impairments that would later form the basis
of her disability claim does not make the earlier medical records automatically relevant. See
Lichter v. Bowen, 814 F.2d 430, 435 (7th Cir. 1987) (stating that “the critical date is the date of
onset of disability, not the date of diagnosis”) (internal quotes and citation omitted). Absent any
explanation, the ALJ could not logically dispute Frazier’s testimony by citing medical evidence
from a period when Frazier concedes she was not disabled.
The ALJ next claimed that inconsistencies existed in findings made by different medical
providers related to Frazier’s strength and spinal function. She noted that Dr. El Shami stated on
January 14, 2016 that Frazier had 4/5 muscle strength in her right leg and experienced some
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decreased sensation to light touching of the L3 to S1 dermatomes (skin areas supplied with afferent
nerve fibers) on the right lumbar spine. (R. 637.) The ALJ contrasted that with a December 9,
2015 finding “by another examining provider” that found 5/5 strength in Frazier’s right leg with
no decrease in dermatome sensation. (R. 109, 652.) Again, however, the ALJ failed to explain
what relevance these observations have to Frazier’s testimony. Contrary to the ALJ’s claim, the
December 2015 and January 2016 examinations that the ALJ relied on were not carried out by
different medical examiners; Dr. El Shami examined Frazier on both occasions. (R. 652-55.) It
is true that Dr. El Shami concluded that Frazier showed somewhat better strength and dermatome
sensations in December than she did in January 2016. But the ALJ never discussed what
dermatome sensations are, what they suggested about Frazier’s condition, or why the differences
the ALJ noted justified discounting Frazier’s symptom testimony. No medical examiner was
present at the hearing to interpret Dr. El Shami’s findings for the ALJ. See Schmidt v. Sullivan,
914 F.2d 117, 118 (7th Cir. 1990) (“The medical expertise of the Social Security Administration
is reflected in regulations; it is not the birthright of the lawyers who apply them.”). Nor did the
ALJ consider that the changes she noted –which appear to have been relatively minor – might have
resulted from normal fluctuations in symptoms related to the medical impairments that Frazier
had. See SSR 16-3p (“Symptoms may vary in their intensity, persistence, and functional effects,
or may worsen or improve with time”).
Even if these two exams involved a meaningful difference in Frazier’s condintion, the ALJ
failed to explain how she could rely on it in light of other findings in the record. Multiple entries
confirm Dr. El Shami’s observation that Frazier had decreased right dermatome sensations. Dr.
Matthew Marcus noted such decreases (as well as 4/5 strength in Frazier’s right leg) on November
4, 2015. (R. 653.) Dr. El Shami found decreased sensation in L3-L4, L4-L5, and L5-S1
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dermatomes bilaterally on March 11, 2016, suggesting that Frazier’s condition might have
worsened from the right-sided decrease in sensation noted in January 2016. (R. 646.) Dr. Anis
Mekhail also confirmed Dr. El Shami’s earlier observations by noting on July 15, 2016 that Frazier
showed “decreased sensation at L3-S1 dermatomes on the right.” (R. 667.) The ALJ overlooked
all of these findings. An ALJ is not required to cite every item of evidence, Getch v. Astrue, 539
F.3d 473, 480 (7th Cir. 2008), but she cannot cherry-pick from the record by ignoring evidence
that runs counter to a finding that the claimant is not disabled. Denton v. Astrue, 596 F.3d 419,
425 (7th Cir. 2010).
In addition, the ALJ’s reliance on the differences between Frazier’s December 2015 and
January 2016 exams fails to account for the fact that neither Dr. El Shami nor any of the other
doctors who examined Frazier during this period found those differences to be meaningful. No
treater doubted Frazier’s claim that she experienced significant pain because her leg was stronger,
and her dermatome sensations were more intact, at one exam than they were at another. In fact,
Dr. Behar, who examined Frazier on March 11, 2016, implicitly credited her pain-related claims
by restarting her on gabapentin and referring her for an epidural injection. (R. 646.) That should
have given the ALJ pause before finding that the record undermined Frazier’s claims. See Lambert
v. Berryhill, 896 F.3d 768, 777 (7th Cir. 2018) (faulting an ALJ for citing normal tests without
noting that the claimant’s physicians found no contradiction between the tests and the claimant’s
pain allegations).
The absence of definitive medical evidence does not end an ALJ’s symptom analysis
because a claimant’s “testimony cannot be disregarded simply because it is not corroborated by
objective medical evidence.” Hill v. Colvin, 807 F.3d 862, 869 (7th Cir. 2015). The ALJ must
also consider other factors such as the claimant’s ADLs. See Israel v. Colvin, 840 F.3d 432, 440
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(7th Cir. 2016); Clifford, 227 F.3d at 871. The ALJ did so here, stating that Frazier tried to live
independently “as much as possible” and could do things like make her bed, prepare simple meals,
manage her personal hygiene, and shop for food in stores once a month. (R. 111.) The activities
that the ALJ described were taken from Frazier’s written function report issued in April 2014. (R.
232-40.) The ALJ then noted additional limitations outlined in Frazier’s more recent December
2014 report. (R. 253-60.) These included needing help in showering, preparing meals, shopping,
and managing household tasks.
Although the ALJ did not explain what these pre-onset
descriptions of Frazier’s functioning had to do with her condition after October 2015, she further
noted some of the symptom-related testimony that Frazier gave at the hearing. Frazier told the
ALJ that she prepares simple meals like sandwiches or frozen dinners two to three times a week
while sitting on a stool. (R. 43.) She can shop in stores, but Frazier clarified that she only did so
if she could sit in “one of [those] little carts” in the store. (Id.) Contrary to the ALJ’s claim, Frazier
stated that she could not make her bed. (Id.) She can only walk for half a block, stand for 10
minutes, and sit for 20-25 minutes. (R. 36, 41.)
The Court is unable to follow the basis of how the ALJ construed Frazier’s testimony about
her symptoms. The ALJ relied on familiar boilerplate language to claim that Frazier’s descriptions
of her symptoms “are not entirely consistent with the medical evidence” in the record. (R. 107.)
It is unclear, however, what symptoms the ALJ questioned, or what evidence she relied on to
dispute anything that Frazier stated. The Commissioner claims that the ALJ relied on her general
summary of the medical record to discount Frazier’s testimony. Even if true, that is insufficient
to uphold the ALJ’s conclusion because courts have repeatedly stated that, without further analysis
that the ALJ in this case did not provide, an evidentiary summary is not adequate to support a
symptom analysis. See, e.g., Larson v. Colvin, 26 F. Supp.3d 798, 811 (N.D. Ill. 2014) (“[The
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ALJ] could not simply summarize the evidence and say it didn’t support Mr. Larson’s allegations.
Just as an expert’s ipse dixit is not acceptable . . . neither is an ALJ’s. That is the whole point of
the logical bridge requirement.”); Elmalech v. Berryhill, No. 17 C 8606, 2018 WL 4616289, at
*10 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 26, 2018).
That said, the ALJ did not base the symptom evaluation solely on her evidentiary summary.
The ALJ acknowledged that Frazier’s ADLs were limited, but she went on to conclude (again
using boilerplate language) that they did not support a finding that Frazier was disabled because
they could not be “objectively verified with any reasonable degree of certainty.” (R. 111.) That
also fails to provide any meaningful explanation of the ALJ’s reasoning. The language the ALJ
cited is not necessarily an improper basis for doubting a claimant’s testimony, but it cannot be a
ground for discounting a claimant’s statements when, as here, it is not accompanied by specific
reasoning that links the record to the ALJ’s decision. As the Seventh Circuit has stated, the fact
that a claimant’s responses to the ALJ’s ADL questions are not accompanied by objective evidence
is not automatically a ground for rejecting them – “otherwise, why ask in the first place?”
Beardsley v. Colvin, 758 F.3d 834, 837 (7th Cir. 2014) (addressing identical language). See also
Wilson v. Colvin, No. 14 C 447, 2015 WL 4555155, at *9 (N.D. Ill. July 28, 2015); Trichak v.
Colvin, 2014 WL 3408687, at *7 (D. Colo. July 14, 2014); Sadler v. Comm. of Soc. Sec., 2014 WL
642235, at *9 (W.D. Mich. Feb. 19, 2014).
The ALJ next stated that even if Frazier were as limited as she claimed, it was difficult to
attribute those restrictions to her medical concerns instead of “other reasons.”
(R. 111.)
Unfortunately, the ALJ never explained what the alternative reasons for Frazier’s restricted
activities might be. See Zurawski, 245 F.3d at 889 (stating that “the ALJ’s analysis must provide
some glimpse into the reasoning behind her decision to deny benefits”). See also Briscoe ex rel.
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Taylor v. Barnhart, 425 F.3d 345, 351 (7th Cir. 2005) (“In addition to relying on substantial
evidence, the ALJ must also explain his analysis of the evidence with enough detail and clarity to
permit meaningful appellate review.”). A review of the “other reasons” that the ALJ addressed in
her decision highlights the difficulties the ALJ would have faced had she attempted to provide
such an explanation. For example, Frazier appeared with a cane at the administrative hearing and
told the ALJ that a doctor had recommended it five months earlier to help her maintain her balance.
(R. 35.) The ALJ objected to Frazier’s claim that she needed to use a cane because the record did
not show that any of her physicians prescribed it. (R. 110.) Yet the fact that a doctor may not
have issued a prescription for an ambulatory device like a cane is not necessarily a ground for
rejecting a claimant’s statements about her mobility. See Stahl v. Colvin, 632 Fed.Appx. 853, 860
(7th Cir. 2015) (“Although it appears that no doctor ever prescribed crutches for [claimant], no
prescription is necessary; crutches can be bought by anyone who wants them.”).
The ALJ was more specific in criticizing Frazier’s account of her symptoms on the ground
that she received what the ALJ described as “only very conservative and routine treatment.” (R.
107.) The ALJ noted that Frazier’s doctors prescribed physical therapy after the August 2013
accident and recommended that she see a pain specialist. Conservative care continued in February
2015, when Dr. Saldanha suggested spinal injections and pain management that Frazier did not
follow up on. In January 2016, Dr. El Shami recommended what the ALJ characterized as “rather
conservative referrals” to a neurologist and physical therapist.
(R. 109.)
Treatment
recommendations such as injections and physical therapy constitute conservative care, which
combined with a claimant’s failure to follow a physician’s treatment recommendations, may
suggest that the claimant’s symptoms are not serious as she alleges. See Olsen v. Colvin, 551
Fed.Appx. 868, 875 (7th Cir. 2014). See also SSR 16-3p (“[I]f the individual fails to follow
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prescribed treatment that might improve symptoms, we may find the alleged intensity and
persistence of an individual’s symptoms are inconsistent with the overall evidence of record”).
Despite the conservative nature of her care, the ALJ’s discussion of Frazier’s treatment
raises serious concerns about how she construed the record to assess Frazier’s testimony. Much
of the ALJ’s discussion of Frazier’s care involves the period between her August 2013 accident
and early 2015. The ALJ noted, for example, that Frazier had failed to follow up with a referral
to a pain specialist by June 2014. (R. 108.) She also cited a February 11, 2015 treatment note
stating that Frazier had “elected for conservative treatment” such as injections and a referral to a
pain specialist, but had not yet seen one. (R. 108, 552.) The ALJ never explained why these
entries were relevant to Frazier’s symptom allegations after the amended onset date of October 10,
2015. Indeed, the ALJ herself stated in other parts of her decision that the pre-onset period was
not relevant to Frazier’s symptoms after October 2015: the ALJ rejected an assessment of Frazier’s
exertional limitations given by a treater in 2013 and 2014 because those findings “were authored
well before the amended alleged onset date.” (R. 108.) The ALJ did not explain why Frazier’s
conservative treatment choices before October 10, 2015 were relevant to the symptom analysis if
an examining doctor’s findings could be dismissed because they were made before the onset date.
Even if the pre-onset period were relevant to Frazier’s post-October 2015 disability claim,
Frazier told the ALJ that she did not see a pain management specialist or seek out more aggressive
treatment immediately after the accident because she was only covered by worker’s compensation
at that point, and “the accident had . . . just occurred and it wasn’t, I wasn’t as bad as I am now.”
(R. 31, 39.) The record confirms those claims. Frazier’s applications for physical therapy were
denied at least from December 2013 through March 2014. (R. 326, 328, 330, 332.) Insurance
problems also prevented Frazier from seeing a pain specialist in June 2014 (which the ALJ noted),
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and again by February 15, 2015 (which the ALJ overlooked). (R. 552.) The ALJ cited some of
what Frazier told her about insurance problems following the 2013 vehicular accident, but she did
not explain why Frazier’s limited access to specialist care did not mitigate the ALJ’s concerns
about Frazier’s conservative treatment. See Shauger v. Astrue, 675 F.3d 690, 696 (7th Cir. 2012)
(stating that an inability to afford treatment may explain a claimant’s treatment choices).
As for Frazier’s treatment after her alleged onset date, the ALJ cited only one entry to claim
that her care was unduly conservative. On January 14, 2016, Dr. El Shami reviewed an abnormal
EMG study of Frazier’s lumbar spine that showed axonal peripheral polyneuropathy. Dr. El Shami
referred Frazier to a neurologist for further review of the EMG results, prescribed gabapentin for
her pain, and suggested that she enter physical therapy. (R. 637.) The ALJ characterized these
recommendations as conservative in nature and noted that Frazier did not follow up with the
neurologist or pursue therapy. (R. 109.) Before an ALJ can criticize a claimant for not following
a doctor’s recommendations, however, she must first determine “if there are good reasons for the
failure to complete the [prescribed] plan” by asking the claimant why she did not do so. Murphy,
759 F.3d at 816. See also Shauger, 675 F.3d at 696 (“Although a history of sporadic treatment or
the failure to follow a treatment plan can undermine a claimant’s credibility, an ALJ must first
explore the claimant’s reasons for the lack of medical care before drawing a negative inference.”).
The ALJ never asked Frazier to explain why she did not see the neurologist that Dr. El Shami
recommended. 3 Nor did the ALJ address Frazier’s testimony that the physical therapy she took
Frazier testified that she was only covered by worker’s compensation until she became eligible for Medicaid at some
point in 2014. (R. 32.) The ALJ asked Frazier why she did not “see somebody a year ago,” which presumably referred
to the alleged onset date of October 10, 2015. (R. 32.) Frazier stated, somewhat unclearly, that she had been referred
by “the company doctor” to Dr. Anil Kesani until he “left town” at an unspecified time in 2015. (Id.) The ALJ did
not try to clarify what this meant or what it had to do with the October 2015 period, but her suggestion that Frazier
did not “see somebody” around the time she claimed that her back pain worsened misreads the record. Frazier went
to the ER on October 5, 2015 for back pain. (R. 1022-44.) She then consulted Dr. Cara Thomas on November 4 and
November 13. (R. 651, 639-41.) The EMG study was carried out on December 9, 2015. (R. 655.) The ALJ herself
cited numerous treatment notes for early 2016.
3
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after her vehicular accident did not provide any lasting relief from pain. (R. 32-33). That
precluded the ALJ from considering whether Frazier declined further therapy based on the lack of
results she claimed she had received from it.
The fact that treatment is conservative, moreover, does not always mean that a claimant
has exaggerated her symptoms. An ALJ must always consider the degree to which the claimant’s
treatment alleviated her symptoms, even if it was conservative. Dyer v. Berryhill, 237 F. Supp.3d
772, 776 (N.D. Ill. 2017). The ALJ did not address that issue in this case, concluding instead that
Frazier’s “neuropathy is manageable with [the conservative] measures” that Dr. El Shami
recommended. (R. 109.) Yet Frazier consistently told both the ALJ and her medical treaters that
was not the case. She testified that, in addition to ineffective physical therapy, the gabapentin that
she took for pain had stopped working. (R. 32-33). Frazier told pain specialist Dr. Lucia Lopez
on April 6, 2016 that gabapentin “did nothing for the pain,” and that physical therapy “did not
help” her condition. (R. 648.) She also told Dr. Alex Behar on March 11, 2016 that therapy was
not beneficial. (R. 645.) Nor did the epidural injections that Frazier received in 2016 provide any
relief for her back pain. (R. 673.) Importantly, her doctors clearly believed Frazier and took
measures to relieve the symptoms she alleged: Dr. Behar restarted Frazier on gabapentin in March
2016, beginning with 600 mg. a day and increasing to 1,200 mg., and Dr. Mikhail referred her in
July 2016 for a second EMG study. (R. 646, 667.) Without discussing why Frazier continued to
need such medical interventions, the ALJ did not adequately explain why Frazier’s conservative
treatment was sufficient to manage her pain. Remand is therefore required so that the ALJ can
build a logical bridge between the record and her evaluation of the symptoms that Frazier
described.
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D. Substantial Evidence Does not Support the RFC Finding.
Frazier also argues that substantial evidence does not support the ALJ’s RFC finding that
she can perform light work as long as various exertional and non-exertional restrictions are put in
place to limit the exertional capacity that light work requires. The RFC measures what workrelated activities a claimant can perform despite her limitations. Young v. Barnhart, 362 F.3d 995,
1000 (7th Cir. 2004); SSR 96-8p. An ALJ must consider all the evidence in the record including
the medical source statements, the claimant’s medical history, daily activities, and lay reports.
SSR 96-8p. Both medical and non-medical evidence are important in determining the RFC
because, although the RFC is a legal decision for an ALJ to make, she may not do so without an
adequate evidentiary basis. See Diaz, 55 F.3d at 306 n.1. In addition, SSR 96-8p requires an ALJ
to provide a narrative discussion on how the evidence supports each of the RFC conclusions and
how the claimant is able to sustain “work activities in an ordinary work setting on a regular and
continuing basis (i.e., 8 hours a day, for 5 days a week, or an equivalent schedule).” SSR 96-8p.
The ALJ did not comply with these requirements in determining Frazier’s RFC. The ALJ
assigned significant weight to the May 19, 2014 report of the state-agency expert Dr. Armand,
who concluded that Frazier had the RFC to carry out light work but could only occasionally stoop,
crawl, or climb ladders, ropes and scaffolds. Dr. Armand also stated that Frazier would need to
avoid concentrated exposure to fumes, odors, dusts, and gases. (R. 59-61.) The ALJ then gave
the same weight to the March 4, 2015 report of Dr. Nenaber, which agreed with most of Dr.
Armand’s conclusions. (R. 74-84.) The ALJ reasoned in broad terms that these opinions were
consistent with the record and that, as state-agency experts, both doctors were expert in evaluating
medical impairments. (R. 110-11.)
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The ALJ reliance on the state-agency experts to formulate the RFC fails, once again, to
account for the fact that both Dr. Armand and Dr. Nenaber issued their reports before Frazier’s
alleged onset date of October 10, 2015. As noted above, the ALJ reasoned in other parts of the
decision that another set of exertional restrictions issued by one of Frazier’s treating physician, Dr.
Kesani, should be given little weight, in part, because it had been issued before the onset date. (R.
108.) The ALJ never explained why the state-agency doctors’ opinions could be accepted, even
though they were issued before October 2015, when Dr. Kesani’s findings were rejected on that
ground. A reviewing court cannot uphold an ALJ’s finding that is based on illogical reasoning.
See Allord v. Barnhart, 455 F.3d 818, 821 (7th Cir. 2006); Ynocencio v. Barnhart, 300 F. Supp.2d
646, 654 (N.D. Ill. 2004). Moreover, the ALJ had good reason for emphasizing the relevance of
the post-onset medical evidence. Frazier testified that her condition worsened after that point, and
the record clearly shows that she underwent tests and treatments whose nature and results were not
available to the state-agency experts that the ALJ favored. That includes increased dosages of
medication, abnormal EMG tests, and multiple complaints of severe pain. The ALJ’s failure to
address these issues leaves it unexplained how she went about assessing Frazier’s RFC. She
claimed that “the evidence as a whole” supported it but, as was the case with the ALJ’s symptom
analysis, such generalized references to the record are insufficient to establish a logical bridge
between the medical evidence and the RFC assessment. See Larson, 26 F. Supp.3d at 811.
The ALJ also found that Frazier’s daily activities justified the RFC, stating that Frazier’s
testimony was consistent with the RFC of light work “even if the claimant’s daily activities are as
limited as alleged.” (R. 111.) Yet the activities that the ALJ cited strongly suggests that is not the
case. An individual who must sit down to prepare a sandwich, cannot make her own bed, and
needs to ride in a cart to shop – alleged restrictions that the ALJ never questioned – almost certainly
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cannot carry out the exertional burdens of light work eight hours a day, five days a week. Nor did
the ALJ explain how someone like Frazier, who testified that she could only stand for 10 minutes
at a time, would be able to stand and/or walk for up to six hours a day, as light work requires. The
ALJ was obligated either to adequately address why Frazier’s alleged limitations were not as
severe as she claimed, which the ALJ failed to do, or to explain how she could carry out light work
despite those restrictions. Doing so would have required the ALJ to clarify “how the evidence
supports each [RFC] conclusion, citing specific medical facts.” SSR 96-8p. The ALJ’s failure to
do so requires remand. Briscoe, 425 F.3d at 352. See also SSR 96-8p (requiring an ALJ to “include
a discussion of why reported symptom-related functional limitations and restrictions can or cannot
reasonably be accepted as consistent with the medical and other evidence”).
III.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, claimant’s motion for summary judgment [12] is granted.
The Commissioner’s cross-motion for summary judgment [19] is denied. This case is remanded
to the Social Security Administration for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion. It is so
ordered.
ENTERED: 01/10/19
____________________________________
Michael T. Mason
United States Magistrate Judge
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