Redeker v. Chater

914 F. Supp. 692, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1410, 1996 WL 50515
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 19, 1996
DocketCivil A. No. 93-11076-GAO
StatusPublished

This text of 914 F. Supp. 692 (Redeker v. Chater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redeker v. Chater, 914 F. Supp. 692, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1410, 1996 WL 50515 (D. Mass. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

O’TOOLE, District Judge.

The plaintiff Linda Redeker seeks review of the denial by the Commissioner of the Social Security Administration (the “Commissioner”) of her claim for disability and supplemental security income benefits. She applied for benefits on December 19, 1989, after sustaining an allegedly disabling neck injury on November 28, 1989. The Social Security Administration denied the application initially and on reconsideration. After a hearing, an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) concluded Redeker was ineligible for benefits because she was not disabled within the meaning of the relevant statutes and regulations. In particular, the ALJ found that she could perform her previous work or other work available in the national economy. Redeker sought review of the decision by the Appeals Council, which remanded the case to the ALJ for further hearings. The ALJ held a second hearing and again denied Redeker’s claim. That ruling became the final decision of the Commissioner on February 20, 1993, when the Appeals Council denied Redeker’s second request for review. Redeker now asks this Court to reverse or remand the final decision of the Commissioner. For the reasons set forth below, the Commissioner’s decision is affirmed.

I. FACTS

Linda Redeker is a thirty-nine year old, college-educated woman who has worked at various times as a commercial artist, a sign painter, a waitress, a riveter, and a self-employed publisher of a magazine. On November 28, 1989, she sustained an injury to the right side of her neck from improper chiropractic manipulation. About three weeks after the injury, she sought treatment at the East Boston Neighborhood Health Center. She was diagnosed with right para-cervical neck spasm, prescribed Naprosyn [694]*694and Flexeril, and referred to an orthopedist, a Dr. Greenleaf, who concluded after examination that “she has what is becoming a chronic trapezial strain.” (R. at 225.) By the end of December, Redeker had minimal pain, with tenderness, but still had limitation of motion.

During January, 1990, Redeker saw Dr. George Hazel for pain in her neck, right shoulder and arm, lower back, and behind her right eye. An MRI revealed a bulge at C5-C6 without clear evidence of root compression. (R. at 238.) Dr. Hazel noted her limited range of motion, recommended hot packs and massage and considered her disabled from her work. (R. at 241-42.) On Dr. Hazel’s referral, Redeker began treatment at the Neurosurgery Department of the Lahey Clinic with a neurosurgeon, Dr. Spar-acio. Examination notes indicate that she had full range of motion in her neck, but pain on extension and head tilt, mid-vertebral and mid-paraspinal tenderness, and no palpable major muscle spasm. Although the doctor recommended physical therapy for the neck for one month, Redeker canceled two scheduled appointments and asked for medication to relieve her symptoms. (R. at 236, 238-40.) Redeker also sought a second opinion from Dr. Louis Meeks of the Neurology Department at Beth Israel Hospital, who recommended that she continue Naprosyn, cervical traction and a hydroculator. She discontinued the traction because it increased her pain. (R. at 270.)

Redeker next saw a consultive physician, Dr. Albert Franchi, on April 4, 1990. Dr. Franchi noted that Redeker held her neck in obvious spasm. He also found she had a limited range of motion in her neck, par-esthesia on the back of her right fourth and fifth fingers, and tenderness over the parav-ertebral spinal muscles from C5 through C7. Although he found her symptoms confusing, he considered them consistent with possible disc protrusion. (R. at 246-47.)

Redeker experienced some improvement in May, 1990. When the pain returned in July, however, Dr. Hazel recommended that she not work for four to six more months and referred her to another neurologist, Dr. Albert Fullerton. (R. at 264.) Dr. Fullerton corroborated Dr. Hazel’s diagnosis and recommended a stronger anti-inflammatory and physical therapy. He also recommended that she not work until 1991. Dr. Fullerton prescribed a muscle relaxant, which Redeker rarely took. (R. at 28, 270-72.)

In June, 1990, Redeker began seeing a chiropractor, Dr. Jeremiah Kelley. He noted restriction on right lateral flexion and extension of the cervical spine and muscle spasm of the upper trapezius and posterior cervical muscles that had caused a loss of the normal cervical lordosis. By January, 1991, Dr. Kelley noted that Redeker obtained temporary relief from his treatments, but that her pain eventually returned. He indicated that her disability made it impossible for her to work and recommended a re-evaluation in six months. (R. at 293.)

Redeker then was next examined by Dr. Huffnagle, a spine and arthroscopic surgeon, who opined that she had a herniation of her disk at C5-C6. In March 1991, he believed that her disability would not last for more than another three months, but in October, 1991, he reported that she continued to suffer pain and was still totally disabled. (R. at 294-97.) Redeker at the same time underwent physical therapy, although she canceled several appointments.

After October, Redeker sought no medical treatment until March, 1992, when she saw an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Ronald Kaplan. Dr. Kaplan noted weakness of grasp in her right hand with sensory deficit in the second, third, and fourth fingers, and two-thirds of range of motion in her neck. He recommended continued physiotherapy, including over-the-door pulley traction and intermittent cervical traction. He opined that she had been totally disabled since November 1989. (R. at 304-05.)

Finally, Redeker saw Dr. Michele Masi, a neurologist, for a consultive examination in May 1992. Dr. Masi found Redeker to be suffering from degenerative changes at the C5-6 with joint space narrowing and encroachment of the neuroforamen and from radiculopathy with reflex and sensory loss and some signs of weakness. Dr. Masi also noted that Redeker exhibited a limited range [695]*695of motion in the neck, tenderness in the right paracervical and trapezius region, right upper extremity weakness due to pain, and diminished pin perception in the right shoulder and right thumb. Dr. Masi opined that Redeker’s ability to sit, stand, and walk were not impaired and that she could lift between fifteen to twenty pounds. (R. at 313-15.)

Redeker herself testified at the hearings before the ALJ that she has been in pain and has had limited mobility throughout this period. She indicated that she found it difficult to keep her neck up, that she was bedridden much of the time, and that she largely did (and could do) nothing more than watch television or read. Redeker also said she can only stand for twenty or thirty minutes at a time and can drive only for short distances. She claimed to use a hydroculator three or four times per day and a cold pack twice per day. She was also still taking medication (Vicodin and Lodine) for pain and inflammation as of the second hearing.

Redeker’s roommate, Carol Ligotti, also testified to Redeker’s incapacities. Ligotti asserted that she had to do virtually everything for Redeker — including all household chores and shopping, preparing Redeker’s hydroculator packs, and even drawing baths for her — because it was painful for Redeker to do so much as lift a carton of milk.

II. DISCUSSION

The Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 423

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914 F. Supp. 692, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1410, 1996 WL 50515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redeker-v-chater-mad-1996.