Jensen v. Colvin

149 F. Supp. 3d 1076, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29872, 2016 WL 889505
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 23, 2016
DocketCase No. 14-C-1357
StatusPublished

This text of 149 F. Supp. 3d 1076 (Jensen v. Colvin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen v. Colvin, 149 F. Supp. 3d 1076, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29872, 2016 WL 889505 (E.D. Wis. 2016).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER FOR REVERSAL AND REMAND

William C. Griesbach, Chief Judge, United States District Court

Plaintiff Jody Lynn Jensen seeks review of the final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security denying her application for disability insurance benefits under the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 416(i), 423(d). For the reasons that follow, the Commissioner’s decision will be reversed and remanded pursuánt to § 405(g) (sentence four).

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff filed her application for benefits in October 2011, alleging an onset of disability date of October 1, 2009, at which time she was thirty-eight years old. Plaintiff listed the following as physical or mental conditions that limited her ability to work: debilitating migraines,. neck and back pain, asthma, fibromyalgia, bulging discs in neck, right leg and foot pain, depression, endometriosis, jaw pain, left wrist tendonitis, and short-term - memory loss. R. 193.' After her applications were denied initially and on reconsideration, Plaintiff requested a hearing. An Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) held a hearing in August 2013, at which Plaintiff, represented by counsel, testified.

A. Plaintiffs Testimony

At the outset of the hearing, Plaintiff amended her onset date to September 30, 2011, so as to avoid any period of time when she was receiving unemployment benefits. R. 18. Plaintiff, who was by then forty-three years old, testified she was married with four children, the oldest three of whom were adults and the youngest age three. R. 19-20. In addition to her husband and three-year-old child, Plaintiffs twenty-year-old daughter, her daughter’s ten-month-old child, and Plaintiffs mother, who had -suffered a stroke, lived with her. R. 21, 33. Plaintiff testified that she completed high school and a vocational course to' become a certified nursing assistant (CNA). She had last worked full-time as a CNA in 2010 and claimed that she was let go because of absenteeism dtíe to her chronic migraine headaches. R. 22.

Plaintiff testified that it was her headaches that prevented her from working since that time. R. 24. She testified, that she had a problem with headaches for most of her life. She claimed she also had “a lot of neck pain and neck problems, which also help contribute to the headaches,” R. 24. As for treatment since her alleged onset date, Plaintiff testified:

I see my doctors and they give me medication to help with my headaches. I have a device where, an electric stimulator that helps with my back and my neck in hopes of reducing pain that will ' eventually cause a headache. And I go to the ER a- lot,. for my headaches and my neck and my. asthma.

R. 24. The medications prescribed for Plaintiffs headaches consisted of Vicodin [1078]*1078for pain, Toradol for more extreme -pain, and Imitrex injections for very, very extreme pain if the other medications did not • work. R24. Plaintiff testified the Vicodin and Imitrex made her tired. Imitrex in particular put her to sleep. The Toradol made her nauseous at times and tired also. R. 31-32. ,.

Plaintiff testified she had been on the same medications and same dosages for “a long time” and nothing had changed. ■ The medications helped “a lot of the time,” but when they did not she went to the emergency,. room. The number of times she went to,the emergency room varied be: tween once or twice per month and four or five times. R, 26. She. testified that when she went to the emergency room she’d be given an IV but claimed she did not know what medication she was given. R 27.

At the time of the hearing, Plaintiff testified she was having four to eight severe headaches per month which required “my big medicine.” R. 44. Plaintiff described the severe headaches as starting in her. left .eye and progressing to both, eyes and.her temples and across her forehead. She described the pain as piercing and throbbing, making her light sensitive and causing nausea and vomiting to the point that she would cry “ferociously.” R. 43. .Plaintiff claimed her severe headaches woiild last up to four days. R. 27. She claimed they were more frequent,’ almost daily, when she did not control' her environment. She controlled her environment by staying at home with' the' air conditioner on and avoiding odors such as fresh-cut grass, campfire smoke, dish soap, laundry soap, perfumes and lotions that triggered her attacks. R. 44-45.

Plaintiff also claimed severe back and neck pain prevented her from standing or sitting for long periods óf time. R. 32. She needed to sit down, arid take breaks even to wash the dishes. If she stood straight for a half hour, she would experience “a lot of pain in my lower back and in my upper back right below my neck and my left shoulder. I have a lot of pain there and it does get thick and swollen if I stand for a long period of time.' My left shoulder tends to swell very large on top.” R. 33-34. Plaintiff claimed' that if' she lifted anything of bent over a certain way it would pull the muscle in her neck and give her a sharp, piercing pain at the base of her neck which would lead to another headache. R. 34. As a result of her physical impairments, Plaintiff claimed she could walk with discomfort down the street about four or .five driveways from her house even with sit-down, breaks. She could lift dishes, but lifting-her fifteen-pound grandchild caused difficulties. R. 34-35. . .

B. Medical Evidence

As noted, Plaintiffs primary complaint was migraine headaches. Although Plaintiff reportedly had problems with migraine headaches since she was a teenager, the first mention of any headaches in the medical evidence is following the July 1995 motor vehicle accident when she would have been twenty-four years old. Though she reported the accident was head-on, she told a neurologist who saw her in January 1996 that she drove home and did not seek medical care at the time. The next morning, however, she reported having a severe headache. She was treated with physical therapy for mild cervical strain and TMJ, but claimed she had daily severe headaches through September 1995. R. 664. Notwithstanding the foregoing, according to the November 1995 report of her family physician, Plaintiff was hit.on the driver’s side by a drunk driver and had neck and back pain since. R. 305. In any event, by the time, she saw the neurologist in January 1996, Plaintiff reported she was down to one-to-three bad headaches per month and. was planning to sue the driver of the [1079]*1079truck that hit her, though a March 1996 report notes she was in a second motor vehicle accident several days ago. R. 662. The neurologist’s diagnosis was post concussive syndrome. R. 664-66.

No further treatment for headaches, migraine or other, appears in the medical record until April 30, 2009, when Plaintiff presented at Family Medical Center in Green Bay, Wisconsin to establish care for migraines and asthma with Dr. Edward Bongiorno. R. 339-40. She reported that her migraines were more frequent since she had been injured in the collapse of the deck at her house the previous month. R. 316, 339. There is no medical report from any hospital relating to the deck accident in the record. In any event, Plaintiff’s prescription for Vicodin, apparently from the March accident, was refilled. R. 340.

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Bluebook (online)
149 F. Supp. 3d 1076, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29872, 2016 WL 889505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-colvin-wied-2016.