Katherine P. v. Kijakazi

CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 10, 2022
Docket1:21-cv-00427
StatusUnknown

This text of Katherine P. v. Kijakazi (Katherine P. v. Kijakazi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Katherine P. v. Kijakazi, (D.R.I. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

KATHERINE P., : Plaintiff, : : v. : C.A. No. 21-427JJM : KILOLO KIJAKAZI, : Acting Commissioner of Social Security, : Defendant. :

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION PATRICIA A. SULLIVAN, United States Magistrate Judge. On October 7-8, 2019, Plaintiff Katherine P., a “younger” individual, applied for Supplemental Security Income (“SSI”) and Disability Insurance Benefits (“DIB”) under §§ 205(g) and 1631(c)(3) of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 405(g), 1383(c)(3) (the “Act”). Plaintiff had graduated from high school with the support of special education and had limited work history, reflecting a pattern of lost jobs (as a school bus monitor and at a daycare center) due to her feeling of being “overwhelmed” because of her inability to understand instructions, to communicate with children/parents, to learn the register and to handle changes in routine, as well as due to excessive time in the bathroom engaged in compulsive hair pulling. Tr. 41-45, 51. She applied for disability based on the following mental impairments: anxiety disorder, borderline intellectual functioning, learning disorder, bipolar disorder, mood disorder, trichotillomania, obsessive-compulsive disorder and autism spectrum disorder. Plaintiff alleges that she became disabled on September 1, 2016, after she was “let go” from her job as a school bus monitor (following a mental-health-based leave of absence during which she was paid Temporary Disability Insurance) because “[she] couldn’t handle the change [to the bus route] and everything.” Tr. 43-44. An administrative law judge (“ALJ”) found that all of Plaintiff’s impairments were severe at Step Two, but that she retained the RFC1 to perform simple tasks with occasional interaction with coworkers, supervisors and the public and only simple routine changes in the work setting. Tr. 24. Based on this RFC, which a vocational expert opined permitted such jobs as routing clerk and coin machine collector,2 Plaintiff’s applications were denied.

Now before the Court is Plaintiff’s motion for reversal of the decision of the Acting Commissioner of Social Security (“Commissioner”) denying her SSI/DIB applications. Defendant Kilolo Kijakazi (“Defendant”) has filed a counter motion for an order affirming the Commissioner’s decision. The matter has been referred to me for preliminary review, findings and recommended disposition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B). I. Background Prior to the period relevant to this case, in 2010 (in connection with a prior disability application when Plaintiff was nineteen), an examining psychologist found Plaintiff to have borderline cognitive capacity; inattention due to lack of comprehension and anxiety; extremely

low memory functioning and attentional capacity scores; impairment of remembering and processing new information significantly worse than her relatively low full scale IQ would indicate; arithmetic skills at a third-grade level and reading skills at a sixth-grade level; lack of

1 RFC refers to “residual functional capacity.” It is “the most you can still do despite your limitations,” taking into account “[y]our impairment(s), and any related symptoms, such as pain, [that] may cause physical and mental limitations that affect what you can do in a work setting.” 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1545(a)(1), 416.945(a)(1).

2 Neither during the hearing nor on appeal did Plaintiff challenge the ALJ’s reliance on the vocational expert’s testimony about these representative jobs; therefore, I do not recommend remand on this basis. Nevertheless, I observe that these jobs both appear to require the cognitive capacity, inter alia, to count coins, read delivery slips, and use charts. U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Dictionary of Occupational Titles (4th ed., Rev. 1991), 222.687-022 (routing clerk), 1991 WL 672133; id., 292.687-010 (coin machine collector), 1991 WL 672573. It is difficult to understand how an individual whose arithmetic skills are at the third-grade level, Tr. 286, could perform these jobs. With remand recommended for other reasons, I recommend that the Court direct the ALJ also to reconsider this aspect of the decision. task persistence; and social difficulties in carrying on a normal conversation outside of family and one friend. Tr. 286-92. This examiner nevertheless found that Plaintiff demonstrated “no impairment in her ability to understand, remember and carry out simple instructions.”3 Tr. 292. During the relevant period, since 2016, Plaintiff treated exclusively and extensively (generally receiving treatment at least once or twice a month) at Quality Behavior Health

(“QBH”), with a psychiatrist, Dr. Ethan Kisch, and a psychiatric nurse practitioner, Nurse Gauthier, as well as with various counselors. These treating sources endorse diagnoses of autism, bipolar disorder, trichotillomania and learning difficulties, with anxiety and difficulties arising from Plaintiff’s inability to understand. E.g., Tr. 297, 319. The QBH treating notes, including the portion filled in for mental status examination (“MSE”) observations, range from negligible to skimpy and are entirely handwritten, in handwriting that is difficult and at times impossible to decipher. E.g., Tr. 329, 332. To the extent that they are readable, except for anxiety, these notes appear to reflect the absence of depression, anger/rage with hair/eyelash pulling partially or completely controlled with medication, although references to the feeling of

being overwhelmed and difficulties in understanding others recur. E.g., Tr. 308, 310, 312, 314, 316, 319, 328. The other medical evidence for the period in issue is the report of the examining psychologist Dr. Louis Cerbo, who diagnosed a mood disorder, occasional panic attacks, as well as compulsive features, with “prognosis is guarded based upon her compulsive behavior and reading comprehension, which would affect her ability to work in many places.” Tr. 400. Dr. Cerbo observed that Plaintiff had “guarded affect,” and difficulty “discuss[ing] some of her mental health issues.” Tr. 399. Dr. Cerbo attributed Plaintiff’s difficulty in sustaining attention to anxiety. Id.

3 The record before the Court does not reveal either what happened with this prior disability application or whether the Psychiatric Examination Report discussed in the text was considered or found to be persuasive. These QBH notes and the Cerbo report were reviewed by two state agency non- examining psychologists. On initial review, Dr. Jeffrey Hughes noted that QBH was the “longitudinal tx source,” but that the notes were “quite difficult to decipher”; only the pertinent diagnoses are recorded in the Disability Determination Explanation. Tr. 67. Dr. Hughes concluded that “the MER available suggests that she retains the capacity to perform simple,

nonsocial tasks at this time.” Id. (emphasis added). On reconsideration, Dr. Marcia Coyle found that the “[p]sych evidence supports severe limitations, but none that are marked or of listing level severity.” Tr. 84. The ALJ’s decision similarly relies on the lack of development of the MSE findings, noting the “[l]imited mental status examination[s].” Tr. 25 (emphasis added). Largely in reliance on the limited information that is readable in the QBH treating notes, including “improvement with treatment, and . . . no consistently impaired mental status examinations,” the ALJ found the non-examining psychologists to be persuasive and relied on them for his RFC. Tr. 27. After the non-examining review was completed, Psychiatric Nurse Gauthier signed two

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Bluebook (online)
Katherine P. v. Kijakazi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katherine-p-v-kijakazi-rid-2022.