Iv'Leania Parker v. Carolyn W. Colvin

660 F. App'x 478
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 20, 2016
Docket16-1030
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 660 F. App'x 478 (Iv'Leania Parker v. Carolyn W. Colvin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iv'Leania Parker v. Carolyn W. Colvin, 660 F. App'x 478 (7th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

ORDER

Robert L. Miller, Jr., Judge.

Iv’Leania Parker applied for Disability Insurance Benefits and Supplemental Security Income claiming disability based on her history of breast cancer, fibromyalgia, carpal tunnel syndrome, and glaucoma; An administrative law judge denied benefits, and the Appeals Council and district court upheld that decision. Because the ALJ’s decision is supported by substantial evidence, we affirm the decision.

Parker applied for benefits in May 2012, when she was 49 years old, and alleges an onset date in May 2011. Her date last insured was in June 2014. Parker asserted that she is unable to work because of a history of breast cancer, fibromyalgia, carpal tunnel syndrome, and glaucoma. Parker has a Master’s in Business Administration and worked for more than 15 years in the banking industry, mainly as a loan specialist. In applying for loan benefits, Parker alleged that in 2007 she was fired because of unidentified “problems with [her] hand and neck,” but she did not say how those problems were affecting her work or what her employer said about them. The Social Security Administration denied Parker’s applications initially in August 2012 and again on reconsideration in October 2012. Her hearing before the ALJ was in June 2013.

After being diagnosed with breast cancer, Parker underwent a double mastectomy in January 2012 and afterward several reconstructive surgeries. At Parker’s latest follow-up in January 2013, the doctor found her to be “doing well” and had “no major concerns.” None of Parker’s doctors opined that her surgeries imposed any limit—not even a minor one—on her ability to work.

Parker reported a previous diagnosis of fibromyalgia to a primary-care physician in April 2013. But her medical records do not show who made the original diagnosis, when it was made, or what treatment Parker received, other than (according to what Parker told the doctor) Cymbalta that she had been given for nerve pain. Her doctor ordered refill medication for her current prescriptions—a cholesterol drug, a diuretic, and a potassium chloride supplement—■ but did not identify any functional limitations.

Parker also sought treatment for carpal tunnel pain. In April 2012, shortly before she applied for benefits, Parker had been examined by neurologist George Abu-Aita for numbness in her hands and pain in her hands and neck. Parker told Dr. Abu-Aita that she had had carpal tunnel surgery in 2008. Dr. Abu-Aita found decreased sensation in the nerves of her hands. He did not prescribe treatment or impose work limitations, but he did order a MRI of Parker’s neck and an EMG of her hands and arms. The MRI showed only commonplace “cervical spondylosis,” 1 and the EMG ruled out *480 “electrodiagnostic evidence of ,,. carpal tunnel syndrome.”'

Parker also had received periodic treatment for glaucoma. In December 2011 she was seen by an ophthalmologist after experiencing blurriness in her eyes. She told the doctor that she had undergone laser surgery for glaucoma ten years earlier. At each follow-up visit the doctor found her to have normal vision and prescribed eye drops. In May 2013 Parker returned to the ophthalmologist for a check-up and reported headaches but no visual complaints. The doctor diagnosed her with early primary open-angle glaucoma. 2 She underwent laser treatment in May and June 2013. The record of Parker’s final eye treatment in June 2013 shows normal visual acuity; Parker had complained of sortie blurriness and irritation but not headaches.

In July 2012 state-agency physician M. Siddiqui performed a consultative exam. He noted generalized muscle tenderness and limited range of motion in Parker’s back but also concluded that her gait was normal and her vision, 20/20. Dr. Siddiqui also noted that Parker reported pain in her hands, yet her muscle and grip strength were normal and she could pick up and grip coins with each hand. He did not identify any functional limitation or impose any work restriction.

In August 2012, Dr. Abu-Aita recommended physical therapy for Parker’s neck pain. The therapist’s progress notes from Parker’s final session, in September 2012, report decreased neck and back pain and increased range of motion “to 90%.”

In August and October 2012, different state-agency physicians reviewed Parker’s medical records, and both doctors concluded that those records do not evidence any severe impairment.

In April 2013, Dr. Abu-Aita ordered a brain MRI, seemingly as a precaution because Parker’s complaints of neck pain, headache, and blurry -vision could have been symptoms of multiple sclerosis. 3 A radiologist noted that the MRI showed a “nonspecific finding” which might have been “demyelinating plaques” or possibly “sequela of chronic small vessel ischemic disease.” 4 The MRI also showed one other area of possible abnormality, so the radiologist recommended a CT scan for further evaluation. That CT scan eliminated the radiologist’s concern about the second possible abnormality; she concluded that the MRI likely was showing prominent cortical veins in that area. Parker did not submit *481 further medical records from Dr. Abu-Aita, so the conclusion he drew from these scans and the follow-up care he recommended, if any, is unknown.

At the hearing before the ALJ in June 2013, Parker testified to limited activities of daily living due to generalized pain and weakness. She said that she wakes feeling “totally debilitated” and at times can’t get out of bed at all or needs three hours to get going. She lives alone and cares for herself but does only minimal cleaning and cooking. Parker said that she can lift or carry only a couple of pounds, can walk only a couple of blocks, can stand for only a couple of minutes, and can sit for only 30 to 40 minutes. She explained that she can use her hands to grip, feel, and manipulate objects but not without pain. Parker said that she drives to the grocery store and reads Bible passages (but uses glasses to read because of her blurred vision). She attends church but has no hobbies or other social life. Parker reported that at the time of the hearing her ongoing medical treatments were limited to taking Fiorinal with codeine, ibuprofen, and diazepam (all prescribed for pain management after her reconstructive surgeries); a cholesterol drug; and vitamins and supplements.

A vocational expert also testified. He opined that Parker could perform her past work as a loan specialist given the residual functional capacity described by the ALJ: able to lift and carry 10 pounds occasionally and less weight frequently; able to stand and walk for up to 2 hours and sit for up to 6 hours in an 8-hour workday; occasionally able to balance, stoop, crouch, and climb ramps and stairs; unable to kneel, crawl, or climb ladders, ropes, or scaffolds; and unable to work around concentrated exposure to hazards or slippery, uneven surfaces. The VE also opined that Parker could find other work with those restrictions, such as working as an information clerk or telephone solicitor.

The ALJ applied the 5-step analysis for assessing disability, see 20 C.F.R.

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Bluebook (online)
660 F. App'x 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ivleania-parker-v-carolyn-w-colvin-ca7-2016.