Krystal Goins v. Carolyn Colvin

764 F.3d 677, 2014 WL 4073108, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 16055
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 2014
Docket13-3729
StatusPublished
Cited by372 cases

This text of 764 F.3d 677 (Krystal Goins v. Carolyn 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
Krystal Goins v. Carolyn Colvin, 764 F.3d 677, 2014 WL 4073108, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 16055 (7th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff filed suit in federal district court seeking to overturn the denial of her application for Supplemental Security Income, a disability benefit for poor people. The Social Security Administration’s administrative law judge who adjudicated her claim found both that she was not a credible witness and (relatedly) that medical evidence did not support her testimony that she suffered from acute pain as a result of having a herniated spinal disc (colloquially a “slipped disc”). The district court affirmed the denial of benefits, precipitating this appeal.

An MRI had revealed the herniated disc back in 1998. The medical record is blank from then until 2007, when the plaintiff complained to an emergency room physician that she had been suffering from lower-back pain for several days. She mentioned the herniated disc, and was prescribed Vicodin. Almost a year later, shortly before she filed her application with the Social Security Administration, she was examined by an anesthesiologist who specializes in pain management, to whom the’s primary-care physician had referred her. She told the anesthesiologist that she was experiencing “burning and shooting” pain radiating from her lower back to her legs and through her legs to her feet; that on a scale of 0 to 10 the pain ranged from 5 to 10; that it was “continuous day and night”; and that it was aggravated by changes in position and by periods of standing, sitting, or walking. The anesthesiologist noted the’s “slow, guarded gait,” and in part on the basis of the 1998 MRI diagnosed three conditions: the slipped disc, radiculopathy (a pinched nerve in the spine), and myo-fascial pain (a chronic pain disorder caused by repetitive motions or by muscle tension induced by stress). In both this and a subsequent visit by her, the anesthesiologist prescribed Lyrica, a common pain-treatment drug. The plaintiff testified in the administrative proceeding that her pain, combined with the drowsiness induced by the pain medication, limited her daily activities to eating, caring for her dogs, taking naps, and watching television. The anesthesiologist opined that the plaintiff was “unable to work” because of “lumbar disc protrusion.”

Another anesthesiologist, a consultant to a state agency that assists the Social Security Administration in disability cases, interviewed (but apparently did not examine) the plaintiff, reviewed her medical records, and concluded that she was able to work full time. He noted the diagnoses of lumber disk herniation, lumbar radiculopathy, and myofascial plain, as well as the SSA field officer’s observation that “she had a hard time sitting in the chair during the interview,” but without questioning the diagnoses or the field officer’s observation the consulting physician concluded that the plaintiff can lift objects weighing 50 pounds for a third of the workday and even can “crouch” and “crawl.” But he left blank the section of the form on which he presented his conclusions that asked him to identify the evidence supporting them. This was an important omission because his conclusions were in tension with the diagnoses that he did not question and with the plaintiffs obesity, which he could not have failed to notice. He stated on the form, again without explanation, that the medical evidence “partially” supported the’s allegations. The report, in short, is a mess.

*679 Another state-agency consulting physician, a pediatrician, reviewed the same medical record that the first consulting physician had reviewed, and endorsed that physician’s conclusions. His report is only half a page long, and extremely unclear. He was aware that the plaintiff had complained that her condition had worsened beginning in 2009, but because there was no medical evidence in the plaintiffs application file he concluded illogically that this “called into question the severity of the [plaintiffs] allegations.” Like the first physician, he did not examine the plaintiff.

We note the oddity of inviting a pediatrician to opine on the medical condition of a 28-year-old woman (the plaintiffs age when the pediatrician offered his opinion) — and likewise the oddity of asking anesthesiologists to evaluate spinal-cord problems. In fairness, we note that one of the anesthesiologists was a specialist in pain management, but the plaintiffs medical problems are not limited to pain.

In late 2009 and early 2010, while her application (filed the previous year) for Supplemental Security Income was pending, the plaintiff sought treatment for her back problem. She received little treatment but did have an MRI in 2010 (the first in eleven years), which revealed degenerative disc disease, stenosis (a narrowing of the spinal canal), and a “Chiari I” malformation, which is a condition in which brain tissue extends into the spinal canal.

At the evidentiary hearing conducted by the administrative law judge, which took place in the fall of 2010, the plaintiff testified that she had quit the last job she had had, working in a hospital cafeteria, in 2008 because it had been too strenuous for her. She testified that her pain and numbness were getting worse, and she speculated that they were being aggravated by her migraine headaches, panic attacks, bronchitis, pain medications, and obesity. She testified that she is five foot six inches tall and weighs 250 pounds and is physically nearly inactive and can’t even sit watching an hour-long television show because of pain — although she does watch cooking shows. She rated her pain as 8.5 on a scale of 1 to 10.

Much of her testimony, for example about how physically inactive she had become, was uncorroborated. That was not in itself a reason to think she was exaggerating her condition. The reasons the administrative law judge gave for finding that she was exaggerating were unsound.

The main reasons were four. The first was that the plaintiff had worked in the cafeteria for almost six months, ending in November 2008, a year after the alleged onset of her disability. But she testified that her condition had worsened since. And the fact that someone works is not a sufficient ground for concluding that she’s not disabled. We have explained that “even persons who are disabled sometimes cope with their impairments and continue working long after they might have been entitled to benefits.” Shauger v. Astrue, 675 F.3d 690, 697 (7th Cir.2012); see also Barnett v. Barnhart, 381 F.3d 664, 669 (7th Cir.2004); Henderson v. Barnhart, 349 F.3d 434, 435 (7th Cir.2003); Kelley v. Callahan, 133 F.3d 583, 588 (8th Cir.1998). This is especially likely when the work is part time — as was the plaintiffs work in the cafeteria.

The second reason was that she had not sought frequent medical treatment. The administrative law judge noted that she had no health insurance, but thought that at least she might have been expected to visit a hospital emergency room more frequently than she had done.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
764 F.3d 677, 2014 WL 4073108, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 16055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krystal-goins-v-carolyn-colvin-ca7-2014.