JENNIFER L. KARR, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ANDREW M. SAUL, Commissioner of Social Security, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 20-1939
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED JANUARY 26, 2021 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 23, 2021
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division. No. 1:19-cv-179 — Philip P. Simon, Judge.
SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. Jennifer Karr applied for Social Security disability benefits based on her complaints of chronic lower-back pain and other ailments. An administrative law judge concluded that Karr was not disabled because she still could perform sedentary work with some restrictions. The district court upheld that determination. On appeal Karr
I
A
Karr challenges only the ALJ’s evaluation of a treating specialist’s opinion regarding her back pain, so we limit our account of her medical history accordingly. Karr traces the source of her back pain to a car accident in the late 1990s. Years later, in 2012, she consulted neurosurgeon Isa Canavati for pain, numbness, and weakness in her lower back and legs. Based on the results of an MRI, Dr. Canavati diagnosed Karr with several spinal disorders. A year later she saw a different doctor for worsening pain, and a second MRI showed mild degenerative disc disease. Over the next several years, Karr tried multiple forms of treatment, including steroid injections, physical therapy, and opioid pain medications—but none alleviated her back pain.
Karr applied for Social Security disability benefits in 2016. In connection with her application, an agency consultant examined Karr and opined that, based on her chronic back pain, she could perform “light duties with alternate sitting, standing and walking.” Two agency doctors also reviewed Karr’s file. They determined that she could stand or sit for about six hours in an eight-hour workday and included no sit or stand restrictions in their report.
Meanwhile, in May 2017 Karr visited the emergency room complaining of severe lower-back and leg pain and numbness about a month after she spent a day lifting heavy objects while
In November 2017, after undergoing a third MRI, Karr saw Dr. Canavati again. In a letter to Karr’s referring doctor, Dr. Canavati reported that Karr was experiencing “increasing pain across the back, buttocks, dorsal thigh and calf,” and that she “cannot sit, stand or walk for any sustained period of time and the pain is interrupting her sleep.” Dr. Canavati then opined that Karr had “advanced degenerative disc protrusion and moderate central and foraminal stenosis.” At his recommendation, Karr opted to undergo spinal fusion surgery in January 2018.
In late November 2017, Karr appeared for a hearing before an ALJ and described the back pain that radiated down her leg, which prevented her from staying in one position for a prolonged period. “I can’t sit for long. I can’t stand for long. I can’t lay for long,” she testified, adding that she needed to change positions every 15 or 20 minutes.
B
The ALJ concluded that Karr was not disabled. The analysis began with the ALJ determining that Karr suffered from many severe impairments, including degenerative disc disease. But from there the ALJ found that Karr still had the residual functional capacity or RFC to perform sedentary work with several limitations—though none involved restrictions on sitting or standing. The ALJ adopted the vocational
In formulating Karr’s RFC, the ALJ assigned only “partial weight” to Dr. Canavati’s letter. Although acknowledging that Dr. Canavati was a treating provider who had examined Karr, the ALJ found “extreme” Dr. Canavati’s notation that Karr could not “sit, stand or walk for any sustained period of time” because the record contained reports of multiple physical examinations showing that Karr had full strength and could walk normally.
The district court affirmed the denial of benefits, and Karr now appeals.
II
We will affirm a decision on disability benefits if the ALJ supported her conclusion with substantial evidence. See
A
Karr’s sole argument on appeal is that the ALJ improperly discounted Dr. Canavati’s statement in his November 2017 letter that she “cannot sit, stand or walk for any sustained period of time.” Karr contends that because Dr. Canavati is a treating physician and specialist (a neurosurgeon), the ALJ should have assigned his statement controlling weight under the regulations applicable to her claim.
The ALJ reasonably and adequately explained why Dr. Canavati’s statement was not entitled to controlling weight. For starters, it is not even clear that Dr. Canavati’s statement reflects his own observation or medical opinion as opposed to a recording of Karr’s own description of her condition. See
To be sure, the ALJ’s decision says that Dr. Canavati opined that Karr “cannot sit, stand or walk for any sustained period of time.” But in reviewing Dr. Canavati’s actual letter, it is ambiguous whether the statement represents his own clinical impression of Karr’s objective limitations after reviewing the MRI and evaluating her physical condition, or whether it merely records and reports what Karr told him. The latter is a real possibility, for the statement in question appears next to other comments recording Karr’s subjective complaints. We
Even if Dr. Canavati’s statement represented his medical judgment, it was inconsistent with other objective evidence in the record. Progress report notes from Karr’s primary care provider in late 2016 and early 2017 indicated a normal range of motion, no back tenderness, and normal strength. The ALJ also pointed to a physician assistant’s notes from Karr’s May 2017 emergency room visit reporting a normal physical exam.
We recognize that Dr. Canavati had the advantage of reviewing Karr’s third MRI in late 2017—a piece of medical evidence not available to the other medical professionals who interacted with Karr. Even so, that fact does not undermine our conclusion that the ALJ reached her decision based on substantial evidence. The weight of the medical record does not support a conclusion that Karr was unable to sit or stand for any meaningful period of time. We cannot say the ALJ committed any error in determining that Dr. Canavati’s statement was “extreme” and not supported by other evidence in the record.
B
Karr is right to observe that the ALJ’s analysis fell short in one respect: the ALJ failed to expressly analyze Dr. Canavati’s statement within the multifactor framework delineated in
As a general rule, an “ALJ should explicitly consider the details of the treatment relationship and provide reasons for the weight given to [treating physicians’] opinions.” Yurt v. Colvin, 758 F.3d 850, 860 (7th Cir. 2014) (citing
The ALJ afforded Dr. Canavati’s opinion only “partial weight” without marching through the factors referenced in
Normally a failure to apply the correct legal standard requires us to remand the case to the ALJ for further proceedings. See Meuser v. Colvin, 838 F.3d 905, 912 (7th Cir. 2016). But if the error leaves us convinced that the ALJ would reach the same result on remand, then the error is harmless and a remand is not required. See Lambert v. Berryhill, 896 F.3d 768, 776 (7th Cir. 2018). In making this determination, we look to the record to see “if we can predict with great confidence
We have no doubt the error here was harmless. Foremost, the statement that Karr “cannot sit, stand or walk for any sustained period of time” may not even reflect Dr. Canavati’s medical judgment, but instead only Karr’s own account of her symptoms. Even accepting the statement as reflecting Dr. Canavati’s opinion, the ALJ stood on firm ground in finding the opinion “extreme”—at odds with the weight of the other medical evidence.
Remember, too, that Karr bears the burden of proving that she is disabled. See
In the end, then, this appeal amounts to a failure of proof on Karr’s part. She had every opportunity to present evidence aligning with and reinforcing Dr. Canavati’s statement, but she did not do so. Karr pointed, for example, to no intervening event in the record supporting the change and discrepancy between her May 2017 emergency room examination and her back flare-up in late 2017 that would have corroborated the statement in Dr. Canavati’s letter. And although Karr supplemented the administrative record after the ALJ hearing with post-surgery medical records reflecting her continued complaints of experiencing “the same type of pain that she was having prior to the surgery,” she did nothing to give this
Although we are sympathetic to Karr’s situation, she has failed to muster the evidence to prove her alleged disability and entitlement to disability benefits. Mindful of the deference underpinning the substantial evidence standard, we therefore AFFIRM.
