Marilyn Brosnahan v. Jo Anne B. Barnhart

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 2003
Docket02-3126
StatusPublished

This text of Marilyn Brosnahan v. Jo Anne B. Barnhart (Marilyn Brosnahan v. Jo Anne B. Barnhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Marilyn Brosnahan v. Jo Anne B. Barnhart, (8th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 02-3126 ___________

Marilyn Brosnahan, * * Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * District of South Dakota. Jo Anne B. Barnhart, Commissioner, * Social Security Administration, * * Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: June 9, 2003 Filed: July 15, 2003 ___________

Before BOWMAN, BEAM, and BYE, Circuit Judges.

BYE, Circuit Judge.

Marilyn Brosnahan appeals the district court’s order affirming the denial of disability insurance benefits. In her July 1998 application, Brosnahan alleged disability since April 1997 from a back injury, fibromyalgia,1 fatigue, and pain-related

1 Fibromyalgia, a chronic condition recognized by the American College of Rheumatology (ACR), is inflammation of the fibrous and connective tissue, causing long-term but variable levels of muscle and joint pain, stiffness, and fatigue. Diagnosis is usually made after eliminating other conditions, as there are no confirming diagnostic tests. According to the ACR’s 1990 standards, fibromyalgia is diagnosed based on widespread pain with tenderness in at least eleven of eighteen sites known as trigger points. Treatments for fibromyalgia include cold and heat depression, irritability, and concentration and sleeping difficulties. The issues on appeal are whether (1) Brosnahan is disabled under the listing for affective disorders, see 20 C.F.R. Pt. 404, Subpt. P, App. 1 § 12.04 (2003), (2) the administrative law judge (ALJ) properly discounted the opinion of a psychologist about Brosnahan’s residual functional capacity, and (3) the ALJ’s credibility findings are supported by substantial evidence. We reverse as to the issue of credibility findings.

I

According to Brosnahan’s testimony at a May 2000 administrative hearing, she was almost forty-seven and had earned a GED. She had last worked in April 1997 as a home-health-care provider, although she had had pain since a June 1996 job injury. By the time of the hearing she had widespread pain, flu-like stiffness and soreness, depression, memory and concentration problems, problems using her arms and hands, insomnia, and fatigue; her symptoms varied in frequency and intensity. Her medications included two analgesics, which she used according to her pain level, and two antidepressants; she believed they had caused her to have problems with vision, to lose her balance, and to feel “dopey.”

Brosnahan further testified that her functional ability was unpredictable. She had perhaps twenty good days a month. Occasionally, on bad days, she could get out of bed only to use the bathroom and to take medicine. She napped several hours most days, and she drove some, although at times she had to pull over to rest or to have someone else drive. She tried to get out of the house, but at times her fatigue, pain, and weakness had caused her to cancel plans--including two doctor’s appointments, after which she had hesitated to reschedule. She liked being around people, and had

application, massage, exercise, trigger-point injections, proper rest and diet, and medications such as muscle relaxants, antidepressants, and anti-inflammatories. See Jeffrey Larson, Fibromyalgia, in 2 The Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine 1326-27 (Jacqueline L. Longe et al. eds., 2d ed. 2002). -2- taken a two-day trip, but if she did not feel well she wanted to be alone. She tried to walk each day, and had on occasion walked two miles without resting. She also had used a treadmill and exercise bike, but after doing so for a couple of days she ended up in bed. Her family helped with household chores; she had problems reaching and bending, and it bothered her to lift even thirteen pounds. However, she did cook simple meals, grocery shop and vacuum a little, and she did do dishes and laundry when she could. Although she had asked her doctors in 1999 if she could try using her self-propelled lawn mower, and she had tried to do so, she stopped after mowing only for a little while.

The medical records reflect that in June 1996, Brosnahan reported to an internist that she suffered shoulder and back pain after lifting a home-health client. Despite prescription medications, trigger-point injections, and physical therapy, Brosnahan continued to complain of back pain, which had worsened by the time she quit her job in April 1997. Throughout 1997 Brosnahan continued to seek care for her back pain from the internist and from rehabilitation specialist Brett Lawlor. She twice reported an inability to cope with her pain, and she also reported sleep dysfunction, swelling in her back, and anxiety. The physicians found multiple tender areas and spasms, and after an MRI showed minimal disk problems, the physicians diagnosed fibromyalgia, for which they prescribed physical therapy, exercise, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory, antidepressants, and counseling. Meanwhile, in fall 1997 Brosnahan saw a psychologist for pain management; he diagnosed adjustment disorder with depressive features.

In January 1998 Brosnahan first saw rheumatologist James Englebrecht, who noted blood tests for arthritis had been normal, found multiple consistent and reproducible tender points, and prescribed a different anti-inflammatory. Brosnahan also underwent a functional capacity evaluation (FCE), which indicated that she could occasionally bend, stoop, squat, climb, crouch, and kneel; could frequently balance, walk long distances, and crawl; could sit for four to five hours, and stand for

-3- four hours at forty- to fifty-five-minute intervals; and could walk for five to six hours. The lifting, carrying, pushing, and pulling restrictions were up to thirty-nine pounds occasionally and up to twenty-four pounds frequently, and Brosnahan was limited to using her upper extremities in hourly intervals for a seven-hour total. Dr. Lawlor, who was treating Brosnahan for her mechanical low-back pain, opined that the FCE findings were “appropriate,” noting they were not related to her fibromyalgia, which could cause more marked limitations.

About monthly during the remainder of 1998, Brosnahan saw Dr. Englebrecht (for fibromyalgia) and Dr. Lawlor, reporting at times some improvement and at times a flare-up of pain, fatigue, joint stiffness, aching, and variable sleep patterns, as well as medication ineffectiveness. Medication changes were made twice due to gastrointestinal symptoms. In August Dr. Englebrecht noted fair-to-good clinical control of the fibromyalgia, despite finding multiple tender points. Brosnahan’s counsel sent her to psychologist Leslie Fiferman and to a rehabilitation consultant. Based on testing, a mental-status examination, and interviews, Dr. Fiferman assessed low-average to average intelligence; social withdrawal; some memory, attention, concentration, and verbal-fluency problems; mild anxiety; and mildly impaired judgment and insight. She diagnosed recurrent and severe major depression, and dementia from chronic pain syndrome. Dr. Fiferman opined Brosnahan was moderately to severely disabled, as her emotional function was moderately to severely impaired, and her cognitive and social functions were moderately impaired. Assessing anxiety, depression, concentration and attention difficulties, and pain behaviors, the rehabilitation specialist opined that Brosnahan was limited to part- time, insubstantial, or sporadic employment due to her physical inability to work consistently.

Social Security Administration physicians and psychologists determined, based on August and October record reviews, that Brosnahan’s mental impairments were not severe, and that she could lift, carry, push, or pull twenty pounds occasionally and

-4- ten pounds frequently; could sit, stand, or walk six hours in a workday; and could occasionally climb, balance, stoop, kneel, crouch, or crawl. In December Dr.

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