Town v. Rhode Island Department of Human Services, 03-6427 (r.I.super. 2006)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 10, 2006
DocketC.A. No. PC 03-6427
StatusPublished

This text of Town v. Rhode Island Department of Human Services, 03-6427 (r.I.super. 2006) (Town v. Rhode Island Department of Human Services, 03-6427 (r.I.super. 2006)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town v. Rhode Island Department of Human Services, 03-6427 (r.I.super. 2006), (R.I. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

DECISION
Plaintiff Gladys Town appeals in this action from a decision of a hearing officer of the Rhode Island Department of Human Services ("DHS") that denied her application for medical assistance benefits. She seeks reversal of that administrative decision on the grounds that the hearing officer did not give appropriate consideration to her treating physicians' opinions, failed to assess her symptoms in accordance with federal law, and failed to make necessary findings of fact. The DHS counters that his decision should be upheld because his finding that plaintiff Town could not conclusively be deemed severely impaired was supported by the record and made pursuant to the applicable legal standards. For the reasons set forth in this Decision, the Court sustains plaintiff Town's appeal, vacates the decision of the DHS hearing officer and remands this case to the DHS for further proceedings consistent with this Decision.

Facts and Travel
Plaintiff Gladys Town filed for medical assistance benefits on March 14, 2003. After reviewing her application, the Medical Assistance Review Team ("MART") informed the DHS that it did not find plaintiff Town to be disabled. MART issued a written denial of plaintiff Town's application for medical assistance on May 30, 2003. The MART denial letter stated that she was not eligible for medical assistance benefits because she was "not aged, or blind, or permanently disabled." (Rosenblum Aff., Ex. 6 at 2.)1 The MART worksheet completed in conjunction with plaintiff Town's application noted that her primary complaints were of pain and depression and that the medical evidence was insufficient to determine the severity of her complaints. (Rosenblum Aff., Ex. 10 at 1.) Plaintiff Town timely filed for an administrative hearing on June 3, 2003. On August 20, 2003, a DHS hearing officer held a hearing to determine plaintiff Town's eligibility for medical assistance benefits through the federally funded Social Security program. In support of her application for medical assistance, plaintiff Town offered testimony at the hearing and supplied the hearing officer with numerous medical records — dating back to March of 2001 — regarding her alleged medical impairments.

According to the thirty-nine year old applicant, although she was previously employed as a nursing assistant, she has been unable to maintain steady employment since 1994 and was unemployed at time of the hearing. (Hearing Transcript of August 20, 2003, at 7, 18.) Plaintiff Town explained that her inability to work for more than a couple of weeks at a time has been the result of "the car accidents and the fibromyalgia, the depression and irritability[.]"2 (Tr. at 7.) In describing her suffering from fibromyalgia, plaintiff Town stated:

It's like — the way I describe it to people that don't know about fibromyalgia is it's like if you went to the gym and did an extensive workout and then you're sore all over except mine doesn't go away. And I have — um — additional things that go with it. Striking pains down my legs, numbness in my hands (inaudible) and the topes [sic] of my shoulders I (inaudible), my arms — um — I have muscle spasms. My — my muscles get really, really tight and I can't loosen them up without medication. Massages hurt. . . . I don't sleep well, and I get depressed because I just want to go and do the normal things I used to do before I got fibromyalgia, and I can't because I want to do everything.

(Tr. at 8.) She also explained that she has about twelve (12) "trigger points" on her body that, when pressured, "disable [her]":

I have two trigger points in my jaw, one on each side. I have two trigger points in my back — (inaudible) area, two trigger points at the base of my neck, two trigger points at my lower spine, two trigger points behind my knees and — in front of my knees — and two trigger points on each elbow.

Id. Furthermore, plaintiff Town detailed her inability to accomplish a variety of nominal tasks because of her condition:

I can't do dishes because I'm standing at a sink. I can't do the laundry because I have to go down the stairs and my knees wobble. I can't carry — um — anything over 6 pounds — um — I can't wash the tub, can't bend over and wash the tub — um — when I'm really bad, I have to have my husband help me in and out of the tub because I can't stand in the shower. Um — sometimes I can't even tie my shoelaces. My husband has to put my socks and shoes on. Um — without medication, he's — he's totally dressing me and occasionally sometimes has to wash me in bed when I'm really bad.3

(Tr. at 9.) Plaintiff Town noted that her pain is magnified when it rains, snows or is humid outside. (Tr. at 10.) In addition, she has difficulty sleeping and wakes up "two or three times a night" as a result of her condition. (Tr. at 11.) Although she is constantly suffering from pain, medication has been successful in limiting her overall level of discomfort. (Tr. at 9.)

In addition to the testimony regarding her fibromyalgic condition, plaintiff Town described how she suffers from depression. (Tr. at 15.) Plaintiff Town stated that she "get[s] depressed a lot" and that she will often "just sit there and cry, cry, cry, cry if [she's] alone." Id. She said she visited a couple of doctors for her depression and received medicine, such as Zoloft, as treatment. Id. At the time of the hearing, plaintiff Town was no longer receiving psychiatric treatment because she was not covered by medical insurance. (Tr. at 16.)

Plaintiff Town also supplemented her testimony with medical records to aid the DHS in evaluating her eligibility for medical assistance benefits. On March 15, 2001, William F. Garrahan, M.D., drafted a letter to a colleague, Nabil Zahreddine, M.D., regarding plaintiff Town's condition, in which he stated:

It is my impression that this patient's answer to all of her problems is probably most likely fibromyalgia. She has trigger points and she has multiple areas and she has had chronic pain for so long. She is definitely disabled from working. She can't hold a job anywhere. She is in need of help. There isn't any medical treatment that I can render. I will support her in her efforts to get the Social Security Disabilities.

(Rosenblum Aff., Ex. 12, Garrahan's March 15, 2001 letter.) Dr. Garrahan later noted — on June 19, 2001, on a form concerning plaintiff Town's ability to sustain competitive full-time employment — that he had "only seen this [patient] once" and "she probably is a candidate for [Social Security] benefits[.]" (Rosenblum Aff., Ex. 12, Medical Questionnaire dated June 12, 2001.)

Between August 6, 2001 and January 11, 2002, plaintiff Town met with Marvin Leftick, M.D., on five occasions to receive treatment for her depression and pain symptoms. Following her second visit, Dr. Leftick observed a possible link between plaintiff Town's pain symptoms, fibromyalgia, and depression. (Rosenblum Aff., Ex. 12, Leftick report dated Aug. 21, 2001.) The physician noted that plaintiff Town had "myofascial pain consistent with [fibromyalgia]" and that "she has deep psychologic problems? personality [sic] disorder, underlying her chronic pain syndrome." Id. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
Town v. Rhode Island Department of Human Services, 03-6427 (r.I.super. 2006), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-v-rhode-island-department-of-human-services-03-6427-risuper-risuperct-2006.