Tait v. Astrue
Filing
11
ORDER and OPINION affirming Commissioner's final decision denying benefits. Signed on 11/27/2012 by District Judge Ortrie D. Smith. (Will-Fees, Eva)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
WESTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI
WESTERN DIVISION
RICHARD LYNN TAIT,
Plaintiff,
vs.
MICHAEL J. ASTRUE,
Commissioner of Social Security,
Defendant.
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Case No. 11-1287-CV-W-ODS
ORDER AND OPINION AFFIRMING
COMMISSIONER’S FINAL DECISION DENYING BENEFITS
Pending is Plaintiff's appeal of the Commissioner of Social Security=s final
decision denying his application for disability and supplemental security income
benefits. The Commissioner's decision is affirmed.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff was born in August 1957, has a tenth grade education with some
vocational training. He alleges he became disabled on October 1, 2005, due to a
combination of Crohn’s disease, COPD, anxiety,
The Court’s independent examination of the Record reveals that in early
September 2005 Plaintiff was diagnosed as suffering from an esophageal ulcer. R. at
273, 277, 471-79. In a follow-up appointment in November 2005, Plaintiff was
diagnosed as also suffering from reflux esophagitis and a hiatal hernia. R. at 271.
In October 2006, Plaintiff went to Neighborhood Family Care to establish care for
nerves and stress; he saw Dr. Elaine Joslyn. She prescribed Xanax and Lexapro. R. at
506. Plaintiff saw (or called) Dr. Joslyn numerous times thereafter. Most of these
contacts related to Plaintiff’s anxiety, depression, and blood pressure. None of them
related to Crohn’s disease. R. at 507-21.1
In February 2010, Plaintiff went to North Kansas City Hospital complaining of
blood in his stool. R. at 264-67. Initial testing indicated Plaintiff suffered from Crohn’s
colitis. R. at 256, 261. In early March, Plaintiff told Dr. Joslyn about the Crohn’s
diagnosis but made no serious complaints about his condition. Dr. Joslyn also did not
prescribe anything related to Crohn’s disease. R. at 522. Plaintiff returned to North
Kansas City Hospital for a regularly scheduled appointment on March 21, 2010, and
reported that he had been “doing well until yesterday.” The doctor described Plaintiff’s
Crohn’s disease as fairly inactive, although Plaintiff was suffering from diverticulitis and
for that reason was admitted for a few days. R. at 251-54. In mid-April 2010 Plaintiff
was admitted for what was thought to be a flare-up of Crohn’s disease. R. at 289-91.
An upper GI and small bowel follow-through was “unremarkable,” but a CT scan
revealed sigmoid diverticulitis. R. at 324-26. These results ruled out Crohn’s-related
issues. R. at 308. In visits to Dr. Joslyn after the bout of diverticulitis Plaintiff reported
that condition, but it does not appear she provided any treatment. However, it does
appear that Plaintiff was using oxycontin more often than had been directed. R. at 525.
In May, Plaintiff again reported using up to twice the directed dosage of oxycontin to
deal with abdominal cramps. R. at 532-33.
In June 2010 Plaintiff saw a gastroenterologist – Dr. Joseph Eisenach, who was
one of the doctors who saw Plaintiff at North Kansas City Hospital.2 Dr. Eisenach wrote
that he was seeing Plaintiff “for what we are presuming to be Crohn’s disease.” Plaintiff
reported that his symptoms were “terrible,” but those symptoms related to back pain that
extended across the upper abdomen. Apart from this, Dr. Eisnach noted Plaintiff did not
exhibit any of the usual symptoms of Crohn’s disease and opined that the condition
“appears to be in remission and in fact there is still some uncertainty about the
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Interestingly, in October 2007 Plaintiff asked for a medical excuse from jury duty.
Plaintiff told Dr. Joslyn he was concerned the travel and walking would cause pain and
his ankles to swell – but he did not express concerns related to Crohn’s disease. R. at
512.
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It is not clear whether this visit was instigated by Dr. Joslyn or in connection with
Plaintiff’s treatment at North Kansas City Hospital. The latter seems more likely, but the
answer to this question is irrelevant.
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diagnosis” given that the “colonoscopy and small bowel series were entirely normal.”
Dr. Eisenach recommended tapering off prednisone and if symptoms recurred “a
repeated imaging to evaluate for recurrent Crohn’s will be performed so that this can
documented in some fashion.” R. at 535-36.
In July 2010, Dr. Joslyn noted that Plaintiff’s pain was controlled and “Crohn’s
well-controlled.” R. at 534. One year later – with no records from intervening visits –
Dr. Joslyn wrote a note declaring Plaintiff suffers from “Crohn’s Disease which has
debilitating flare-ups in spite of medication” and “chronic generalized anxiety, which can
cause him difficulty interacting with co-workers.” R. at 227.
During the hearing, Plaintiff testified that when he was working he weighed
around 190 to 200 pounds, but that he had actually gained weight while disabled and
currently weighed more than 240 pounds. R. at 35. He last worked for a friend doing
home improvement work in 2005, but he could no longer do the work because of his
Crohn’s disease. R. at 36-37. He testified that due to back pain he could not sit or
stand for more than twenty minutes at a time and sometimes had to recline completely.
He also testified that his “bathroom habits are quite frequent, very frequent,” particularly
with flare-ups of Crohn’s or diverticulitis. R. at 40-41. Flare-ups occur once every two
to three weeks and can last from three to five days. R. at 42. The back pain started
shortly before he went to the hospital and was diagnosed with Crohn’s disese in
February 2010; he takes medication but it does not help completely and leaves him
dizzy, wobbly and unstable. R. at 41. Plaintiff also testified that he suffers from
depression and anxiety, and experiences panic attacks every other day. R. at 43.
The ALJ found Plaintiff had been diagnosed with Crohn’s disease, gastr-reflux
disease, COPD, and anxiety. However, she found Plaintiff’s testimony regarding the
intensity and limiting effects of those conditions during the time period in question was
overstated. In reaching this conclusion, the ALJ noted the paucity of treatment between
the alleged onset date in 2005 and the actual diagnosis of Crohn’s disease in 2010.
Indeed, nothing in the Record establishes Plaintiff had Crohn’s disease before 2010 –
and this is also the date Plaintiff alleges his back pain intensified. While Plaintiff’s
gastro-intestinal problems required hospitalization in 2010, they were resolved within a
year. The ALJ also noted his Crohn’s disease has been described by those treating the
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condition as being in remission or, perhaps, to have never existed at all. R. at 9-11.
The ALJ noted Dr. Joslyn’s July 2011 note, but gave it little weight because it was
inconsistent with her treatment notes. R. at 11. The ALJ found Plaintiff could perform
light work with limitations on climbing, kneeling, or crawling, and with limitations on
exposure to certain environmental conditions. R. at 9. Based on the testimony from a
vocational expert, the ALJ concluded Plaintiff could return to his past relevant work as a
telemarketer and could also perform other jobs in the national economy (such as
cashier, sales attendant, folding machine operator, laminator, circuit board assembler,
and document preparer). R. at 12-14.
II. DISCUSSION
A[R]eview of the Secretary=s decision [is limited] to a determination whether the
decision is supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole. Substantial
evidence is evidence which reasonable minds would accept as adequate to support the
Secretary=s conclusion. [The Court] will not reverse a decision simply because some
evidence may support the opposite conclusion.@ Mitchell v. Shalala, 25 F.3d 712, 714
(8th Cir. 1994) (citations omitted). Though advantageous to the Commissioner, this
standard also requires that the Court consider evidence that fairly detracts from the final
decision. Forsythe v. Sullivan, 926 F.2d 774, 775 (8th Cir. 1991) (citing Hutsell v.
Sullivan, 892 F.2d 747, 749 (8th Cir. 1989)). Substantial evidence means Amore than a
mere scintilla@ of evidence; rather, it is relevant evidence that a reasonable mind might
accept as adequate to support a conclusion. Gragg v. Astrue, 615 F.3d 932, 938 (8th
Cir. 2010).
A. Failure to Accord Controlling Weight to Dr. Joslyn’s Opinion
Plaintiff first faults the ALJ for not deferring to Dr. Joslyn’s July 2011 note and
granting it controlling weight. Generally speaking, a treating physician=s opinion is
entitled to deference. This general rule is not ironclad; a treating physician=s opinion
may be disregarded if it is unsupported by clinical or other data or is contrary to the
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weight of the remaining evidence in the record. E.g., E.g., Anderson v. Astrue, 696 F.3d
790, 793-094 (8th Cir. 2012); Pena v. Chater, 76 F.3d 906, 908 (8th Cir. 1996). Here,
there are a multitude of reasons why the ALJ did not err. First, it is not even clear that
Dr. Joslyn’s note provides any opinions to which deference could be accorded. She
does not describe either of Plaintiff’s conditions in terms that would suggest they are
disabling. She does not say how often Plaintiff suffers from flare-ups, which means
there is no information that can be incorporated into an RFC. The report about anxiety
is similarly deficient. Second, it is not clear that Dr. Joslyn can be deemed to be
Plaintiff’s treating doctor for Crohn’s disease because she was not the doctor treating
that condition. “The treating physician rule is premised, at least in part, on the notion
that the treating physician is usually more familiar with a claimant=s medical condition
than are other physicians.” Thomas v. Sullivan, 928 F.2d 255, 259 n.3 (8th Cir. 1991)
(citation omitted). Third, and most critically, Dr. Joslyn’s two-sentence assessment is
unsupported by medical evidence. In fact, it is contradicted by medical evidence. Dr.
Joslyn’s only prior mention of Plaintiff’s Crohn’s disease described the condition as
“well-controlled.” Medical tests confirmed that Plaintiff’s Crohn’s disease was
controlled. Dr. Eisenach – a specialist in the field – even cast doubt on the existence of
the condition. With respect to Plaintiff’s anxiety, Dr. Joslyn’s contemporaneous
treatment notes provide little support for her contention that Plaintiff may not be able to
interact with co-workers. Moreover, this assessment was contradicted by Plaintiff’s own
testimony; while he admitted he did not like crowds, he did not claim he had difficulty
dealing with people. R. at 51. In this regard, the ALJ also noted Dr. Joslyn’s failure to
refer Plaintiff to specialist or suggest stronger measures for dealing with his conditions –
factors the ALJ found weighed against her intimation that Plaintiff is limited in the
manners she suggested.
B. The ALJ’s Credibility Analysis
The familiar standard for analyzing a claimant=s testimony is set forth in Polaski v.
Heckler, 739 F.2d 1320 (8th Cir. 1984) (subsequent history omitted):
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While the claimant has the burden of proving that the
disability results from a medically determinable physical or
mental impairment, direct medical evidence of the cause and
effect relationship between the impairment and the degree of
claimant=s subjective complaints need not be produced. The
adjudicator may not disregard a claimant=s subjective
complaints solely because the objective medical evidence
does not fully support them.
The absence of an objective medical basis which supports
the degree of severity of subjective complaints alleged is just
one factor to be considered in evaluating the credibility of the
testimony and complaints. The adjudicator must give full
consideration to all of the evidence presented relating to
subjective complaints, including the claimant=s prior work
record, and observations by third parties and treating and
examining physicians relating to such matters as:
1. The claimant=s daily activities;
2. the duration, frequency and intensity of the pain
3. precipitating and aggravating factors;
4. dosage, effectiveness and side effects of
medication;
5. functional restrictions.
The adjudicator is not free to accept or reject the claimant=s
subjective complaints solely on the basis of personal
observations. Subjective complaints may be discounted if
there are inconsistencies in the evidence as a whole.
739 F.2d at 1322. While current regulations incorporate these considerations, the
Eighth Circuit has declared that the Apreferred practice@ is to cite Polaski. Schultz v.
Astrue, 479 F.3d 979, 983 (8th Cir. 2007). Plaintiff faults the ALJ for focusing solely on
the objective medical evidence. The Court interprets the Record differently. In addition
to noting the lack of medical evidence, the Court noted inconsistencies between
Plaintiff’s testimony and that evidence, as well as the things Plaintiff said – and did not
say – to his doctors.
The Court has already discussed the medical evidence. Plaintiff’s Crohn’s
disease was diagnosed in 2010. This does not explain how Crohn’s disease caused
Plaintiff to be disabled five years earlier, particularly given that Plaintiff was not
exhibiting or complaining about symptoms associated with Crohn’s disease at that time.
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Plaintiff’s testimony contained complaints that are not reflected in any of his statements
to doctors, which further undercuts his credibility.
Plaintiff also alleges the ALJ erred in discounting the letters Plaintiff submitted
from friends and family members. Like the ALJ, the Court sees no need to parse the
specifics of these letters. It is sufficient to note that while these letters are supportive of
Plaintiff but do not really shed any light on Plaintiff’s abilities after his alleged onset date.
C. Plaintiff’s RFC
Plaintiff argues the ALJ arbitrarily established his RFC and the ultimate
conclusion that Plaintiff could return to his work as a telemarketer is particularly
erroneous because of his inability to work with members of the public. This argument
depends significantly on the success of the other arguments. Absent some error in the
ALJ’s findings regarding the medical evidence and Plaintiff’s credibility, there is no error
in the findings regarding Plaintiff’s RFC. It is true the RFC does not incorporate
Plaintiff’s complaints, but it did not need to because the ALJ found those complaints
were overstated. The ALJ’s findings were supported by substantial evidence in the
Record as a whole.
III. CONCLUSION
The Commissioner’s final decision is affirmed.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ Ortrie D. Smith
ORTRIE D. SMITH, SENIOR JUDGE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DATE: November 27, 2012
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