Rebecca McGlothin v. Commissioner of Social Securit

299 F. App'x 516
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 2008
Docket07-4355
StatusUnpublished
Cited by99 cases

This text of 299 F. App'x 516 (Rebecca McGlothin v. Commissioner of Social Securit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rebecca McGlothin v. Commissioner of Social Securit, 299 F. App'x 516 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant Rebecca McGlothin appeals from the judgment of the district court affirming the Commissioner of Social Security’s denial of her application for benefits. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

McGlothin, a resident of Dayton, Ohio, was forty-eight years old when she applied for Disability Insurance Benefits and Supplemental Security Income. A high school graduate, she had worked as a cashier, dishwasher, laborer, and food preparer. Before discontinuing work and applying for benefits in August 2002, McGlothin worked as a cashier in a grocery store. Her health problems included a decade-long history of heart problems with multiple hospitalizations for bypass surgeries and angioplasties. McGlothin had also been treated for thoracic outlet syndrome after she developed pain in her right shoulder while shoveling snow during employment at a gas station in 1985. Additionally, McGlothin suffered from depression and anxiety.

McGlothin submitted her application on August 19, 2002. She alleged that she was disabled due to “bypass surgery '92, HBP [high blood pressure], heart problems” as of August 12, 2002. McGlothin’s primary complaints were of weakness and shakiness in her arms and hands as well as pain in her shoulders, arms, and hands. In a self-report dated February 24, 2003, McGlothin reported pain and shakiness in her shoulders, arms, and hands causing significant limitations in her daily activities. She wrote: “[S]houlders feel like pin cushion with ice pikes going from shoulders to elbows hurts just to have my arms hang not sleepin cause of pain toss turn no rest then will sleep for 10 to 12 hours.” She reported that she “can’t raise [her] arms above [her] head hardly long enough to pull on a shirt”; that “sometimes [she] can’t get food to [her] mouth for shaking too much”; that she had difficulty driving because she “can’t control the shakes enough to be steady at the wheel”; and that she no longer enjoyed her hobbies of sewing and basketball because she “cannot hold a needle to sew. Cannot play basketball cause [she] can’t raise [her] arms anymore.” She further reported that she wore wrist braces 24 hours a day. McGlothin also reported anxiety and depression and wrote “sometimes feel like I have no control over anything.” She indicated that her family doctor had referred her to a psychiatrist for bipolar tendencies and that she intended to make an appointment.

McGlothin’s application was denied initially and on reconsideration, and *518 McGlothin filed a timely request for a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”). A de novo hearing was held on March 11, 2004 before ALJ Melvin A. Padilla. McGlothin, represented by counsel, appeared and testified at the hearing. At the hearing, McGlothin again complained of pain and “shaking” in her neck, shoulders, back, and arms. She stated that her hands “don’t work like they used to anymore” and that she could no longer wash the dishes. McGlothin stated that her neurosurgeon had recommended wrist braces and physical therapy but that neither had helped. She described her “shaking” as “like somebody sticking pins in my shoulders and then I just end up shaking and pain going down my back and up into my head.” She described her back pain as “in the middle of my back between my shoulder blades like somebody hit me with a baseball bat.” In response to questioning, McGlothin stated that surgery had not been recommended for her hands, back, or neck, but that she recently started pain management for her back. She described her anxiety and depression: “Shortly after I ended up not working, then everything started crowding in on me____[T]he phone will ring and it’ll be a bill collector and I just crawl under a blanket and cover up my head and stay there.” She stated that she cries “[t]wo or three times a day.... I don’t need a reason.” She also reported that she was taking Lexapro for her depression.

Regarding her activities of daily living, McGlothin testified that she lives alone and drives short distances two or three times per week. She stated that she visits a friend across the street and that her grown children visit her frequently at home. She stated that she brushes her own hair and dresses herself but does not wear shirts or jackets with buttons and does not tie her shoes. She stated that she goes grocery shopping only with help from relatives, cooks for herself “on a good day,” and washes the dishes every two or three days. She stated that does not clean or wash clothes. She stated that she could no longer engage in her hobbies, walk her dog, or check on her elderly neighbors “like [she] used to.”

Regarding her functional limitations, McGlothin testified that she was most comfortable “changing positions” between sitting, standing, and walking, and that she could sit for about ten minutes and walk and stand for about fifteen minutes. She stated that she gets tired when climbing stairs. She estimated that she could lift “maybe five/ten” pounds. She last worked in August 2002 as a cashier.

A vocational expert, Charles Ryan, Ph. D., also testified at the hearing. Ryan testified that McGlothin’s prior jobs as a dishwasher, cashier, laborer, and food preparer were classified as light exertion work. Given McGlothin’s limitations, Ryan found that she could return to her positions as dishwasher and food preparer. He also testified that in the regional economy of Dayton, Cincinnati, and Springfield, Ohio, she could perform about 3,500 medium exertion jobs such as custodian, kitchen worker, and floral aid; and about 4,000 unskilled jobs requiring light exertion, such as X-ray inspector in the food processing industry, product inspector, lens matcher, house sitter, nut sorter, and table worker.

In addition to the testimony taken at the hearing, medical records from nine doctors who treated McGlothin or reviewed her medical record were admitted into evidence. The voluminous records are summarized below.

Dr. Thomas Goodall, a neurosurgeon, treated McGlothin intermittently since 1986 for cervical radiculopathy, brachial plexus lesion, carpal tunnel syndrome, and thoracic outlet syndrome due to an “industrial injury,” presumably her 1985 acci *519 dent. Goodall examined MeGlothin on September 20, 2002, and concluded that MeGlothin had mild left and borderline right ulnar neuropathy at the elbow.

In a report of November 26, 2002, Goodall reported that an EMG revealed bilateral ulnar neuropathy but noted that on physical examination MeGlothin did not appear to be compromised. He further noted her subjective complaints of pain in her back and both arms. In a letter to McGlothin’s attorney of the same date, Goodall again noted McGlothin’s subjective complaints of pain in her arms and “jumping.” He concluded that MeGlothin “remains temporarily and totally disabled.” The following month, despite the fact that McGlothin’s cardiologist had released MeGlothin to work without restrictions, Goodall “extend[ed] her time off’ due to McGlothin’s complaints of “shakiness” and her statement that she was unable to work due to her shoulder, neck, and arm pain.

In 2003, Goodall ordered an MRI of the cervical spine in response to McGlothin’s complaints of neck pain and tingling in her hands. • The results were normal.

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