Beauti Das v. Commissioner Social Security

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

Beauti Das v. Commissioner Social Security

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT _____________

No. 22-3229 _____________

BEAUTI R. DAS, Appellant

v.

COMMISSIONER SOCIAL SECURITY ________________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. Civil No. 1:21-cv-13020) District Judge: Honorable Noel L. Hillman ______________

Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) September 7, 2023 ______________

Before: CHAGARES, Chief Judge, HARDIMAN, and MONTGOMERY-REEVES, Circuit Judges

(Opinion filed: September 21, 2023) ____________

OPINION * ____________

* This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and, pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7, does not constitute binding precedent. CHAGARES, Chief Judge.

Beauti Das appeals from the District Court’s order affirming the Commissioner of

the Social Security Administration’s (“SSA”) determination that Das was not disabled

under Title II of the Social Security Act during the relevant period. On appeal, Das

challenges the determination that her anemia and heavy menses were not sufficiently

severe during the period under review and did not require additional limitations when

formulating her residual functional capacity (“RFC”) because these conditions did not

result in any functional limitations while working. Because we conclude that substantial

evidence supported the severity and RFC determinations, we will affirm the District

Court’s order.

I.

We write solely for the parties and so recite only the facts necessary to our

disposition. Das applied for Social Security disability benefits in 2018, alleging she

became disabled on August 13, 2017 due to a host of impairments including anemia and

heavy menses, the sole conditions relevant to this appeal. Anemia occurs when the body

does not have enough iron to produce hemoglobin. It can cause fatigue, weakness,

dizziness, headaches, and other symptoms. Heavy menses, also called menorrhagia, is

the medical term for menstrual periods with abnormally heavy or prolonged bleeding. It

has its own host of symptoms including interruption and restriction of daily activities due

to heavy menstrual flow, and it can also cause anemia.

The record reflects that Das’s rheumatologist first diagnosed her with anemia in

April 2017 but noted that “[s]he is asymptomatic.” Administrative Record (“AR”) 1010.

2 In June 2018, her primary care doctor recommended an iron supplement for her anemia,

and when Das returned in September for a follow up on her anemia and other conditions

she reported “no new complaints.” AR 1021. The record of that follow-up appointment

indicated that her anemia was well controlled. Das reported having “heavy menstrual

flow” but also that she had no fatigue or other symptoms and that she “fe[lt] fine.” Id.

Das continued regularly visiting her rheumatologist through March 2019. Her

rheumatologist occasionally noted Das’s reports of “heavy menses” but did not otherwise

indicate effects of that condition or her associated anemia. In January 2019, shortly

before the end of her insured period for the purposes of social security benefits, Das’s

blood tests reflected that her anemia was “stable.” AR 2018.

Das’s last insured date was March 31, 2019. In April 2019, Das began seeing a

hematologist who started her on a regime of intravenous iron infusions for her anemia,

which she received in 2019 and 2020. The hematologist’s notes indicate that Das’s

anemia improved following these infusions.

Through early 2020, Das met with several doctors, including her rheumatologist,

primary care physician, gynecologist, and hematologist. The status of her anemia and

heavy menses conditions appeared to vary significantly during this period based on her

medical records from these visits. Those records reflect that she reported that she was not

experiencing abnormal vaginal bleeding during some periods, but she also occasionally

reported the opposite. Her hematologist noted in mid-2020 that she “may need to re-start

IV iron.” She also began taking oral contraceptives in mid-2019 to help control the

heavy menses.

3 An administrative law judge (“ALJ”) considered and denied Das’s claim for

Social Security disability benefits in 2020. As relevant here, the ALJ found that,

although Das did have several severe impairments impacting her ability to work, her

anemia and heavy menses did not qualify as severe during the period at issue. Further,

the ALJ did not include any limitations related to Das’s anemia and heavy menses when

formulating her RFC. Das sought review of the ALJ’s decision from the SSA Appeals

Council, but her request was denied. Das subsequently filed a complaint in federal court

seeking review of many different aspects of the ALJ’s disability determination, including

her contention that the ALJ failed to reasonably assess her anemia and heavy menses and

include appropriate limitations associated with those conditions in her RFC. The District

Court affirmed the ALJ’s decision. Beauti Rani D. v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec.,

2022 WL 4536265

, at *7 (D.N.J. Sept. 28, 2022). As relevant here, it found that substantial

evidence supported the ALJ’s finding that Das’s anemia was a non-severe impairment

and that the ALJ properly considered Das’s anemia in formulating her RFC.

Id.

at **4–5.

Das timely appealed.

II. 1

The core issue in this case is whether Das was disabled within the meaning of the

Social Security Act at any point during the period between August 13, 2017, the date Das

alleged her disability began, and March 31, 2019, the date Das was last insured for

1 The District Court exercised subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to

42 U.S.C. § 405

(g). This Court has appellate jurisdiction over the District Court’s decision pursuant to

28 U.S.C. § 1291

.

4 disability benefits. An individual is disabled if her impairments are severe enough that

she is incapable of performing her previous work and engaging in “any other kind of

substantial gainful work which exists in the national economy.”

42 U.S.C. § 423

(d)(2)(A). To make this determination, the ALJ must consider, in sequence, whether

a claimant: (1) worked during the alleged period of disability; (2) has a severe

impairment; (3) has an impairment that meets or medically equals the requirements of an

impairment listed in the regulations and is considered per se disabling; (4) can return to

her past relevant work; and (5) if not, whether she can perform other work that exists in

significant numbers in the national economy.

20 C.F.R. § 404.1520

.

The ALJ here concluded that Das’s claimed anemia and heavy menses disabilities

failed at step two of the above analysis — in other words, that those conditions were not

severe impairments. The ALJ also did not include any limitations in Das’s RFC as a

result of her anemia and heavy menses, though she considered these conditions when

formulating Das’s RFC. The relevant regulations, framed in the negative, provide the

following explanation of what constitutes a “severe impairment”: “If you do not have

any impairment or combination of impairments which significantly limits your physical

or mental ability to do basic work activities, [the Social Security Administration] will

find that you do not have a severe impairment and are, therefore, not disabled.”

20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1520

(c), 416.920(c); see also

id.

§ 404.1522(a) (“An impairment or

combination of impairments is not severe if it does not significantly limit your physical or

mental ability to do basic work activities.”). Importantly, “the claimant always bears the

burden of establishing . . . that she is severely impaired,” Zirnsak v. Colvin,

777 F.3d 5 607, 611

(3d Cir. 2014), though that burden “is not an exacting one,” McCrea v. Comm’r

of Soc. Sec.,

370 F.3d 357, 360

(3d Cir. 2004).

This Court, like the District Court, reviews whether the ALJ’s severity

determination is supported by substantial evidence. Biestek v. Berryhill,

139 S. Ct. 1148, 1153

(2019) (quoting

42 U.S.C. § 405

(g)). The substantial evidence threshold “is not

high.” Id. at 1154. Substantial evidence is “more than a mere scintilla” and “means—

and means only—‘such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate

to support a conclusion.’” Id. (quoting Consolidated Edison Co. v. NLRB,

305 U.S. 197, 229

(1938)). We do not “weigh the evidence or substitute [our] conclusions for those of

the fact-finder,” Williams v. Sullivan,

970 F.2d 1178, 1182

(3d Cir. 1992), because the

question before us is not whether Das is disabled but rather whether the ALJ’s finding

that she is not disabled is supported by substantial evidence.

Applying the foregoing principles, we hold, as the District Court did, that

substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s determination that Das did not carry her burden

of proving that her anemia and heavy menses conditions were severe. The crux of this

severity determination was based on Das’s failure to show “limitations arising from this

condition.” AR 35. The ALJ noted, in particular, that the forms of treatment Das

received for anemia were “conservative” and that the record did not include evidence of

“abnormal [medical] examination findings in terms of alertness, orientation, or motor

function.”

Id.

The ALJ also highlighted that many of Das’s medical records from the

relevant period indicated that she had not complained of anemia-related symptoms, that

her anemia was asymptomatic, and that she had specifically denied abnormal vaginal

6 bleeding on multiple occasions.

Id.

These facts constitute far more than a mere scintilla

of evidentiary support for the ALJ’s conclusion that Das failed to carry her burden of

proving that her anemia and heavy menses conditions were severe, such that “a

reasonable mind might accept [this evidence] as adequate to support [the ALJ’s]

conclusion.” Consolidated Edison Co.,

305 U.S. at 229

(citations omitted).

In response, Das asserts that the ALJ’s decision “mischaracteriz[ed]” the evidence

cited in support of the severity determination, Das Br. at 15, 26, but the record belies that

contention. Das’s own recitation of the facts, for example, admits that her doctor’s

treatment notes from the relevant period “consistently recorded that [Das] was

asymptomatic with regard to her anemia.” Das Br. at 8. The various other issues Das

purports to identify are similarly unavailing because they are either irrelevant or are not

inaccuracies at all. Das cannot avoid the fact that no doctor opined at any point that her

anemia and heavy menses imposed any specific functional limitations that would hinder

her ability to work; the ALJ’s observations to this end thus support her determination that

those conditions were not severe.

Das also faults the ALJ for allegedly failing to consider certain evidence that she

claims undercuts the severity determination, particularly various lab testing data and

medical records that the ALJ did not cite in her decision. 2 But “we do not expect the ALJ

2 Das also argues that the iron infusion treatments she received demonstrate the severity of her condition. She acknowledges, however, that those infusions fell outside the insured period. Those transfusions are thus not proper evidence of her conditions’ severity. See

20 C.F.R. § 404.131

; Matullo v. Bowen,

926 F.2d 240, 244

(3d Cir. 1990) (holding that a claimant must establish that the onset date of disability occurred prior to the expiration of the claimant’s insured status).

7 to make reference to every relevant treatment note in a case where the claimant . . . has

voluminous medical records,” so long as the ALJ’s analysis is otherwise sufficiently

robust. Fargnoli v. Massanari,

247 F.3d 34, 42

(3d Cir. 2001). The ALJ’s conclusion

that Das’s anemia and heavy menses conditions were not severe was well-reasoned and

thoroughly substantiated by extensive citations to Das’s medical records, 3 making it

readily apparent that the ALJ “consider[ed] and evaluate[d] the medical evidence in the

record consistent with [her] responsibilities under the regulations and case law”

regardless of her omission of other potentially relevant information.

Id.

Das’s proffered

medical records and test results thus do not alter our conclusion that the ALJ’s severity

determination was supported by substantial evidence.

The same goes for Das’s own testimony, which she cites as additional evidence

undermining the ALJ’s step two severity analysis. That testimony, however, is

minimally probative of the severity of Das’s condition because it centered near-

exclusively on the effects of her heavy menstrual bleeding around the time of the

testimony, not the relevant period for purposes of the disability determination. Moreover,

3 Das’s initial claims involved several additional alleged disabilities and a record that stretched more than two thousand pages. Given the breadth of issues to cover and evidence to consider, it was eminently reasonable for the ALJ to cite only portions of the relevant evidence on a particular issue. Her 25-page, single-spaced decision covers each of Das’s claims and carefully analyzes them via the five-step test required by

20 C.F.R. § 404.1520

, supporting each separate conclusion with dozens of citations to different parts of the record. In fact, she even found certain of Das’s other conditions did meet the “severe impairment” standard. Such rigorous analysis assures us that she considered all relevant evidence, even if it was impracticable to explicitly weigh every piece of evidence or to address every countervailing factor for every analytical step in the decision itself.

8 even if Das’s testimony were relevant, an ALJ need not rely on a claimant’s own

testimony regarding a condition’s severity in the face of contradictory medical evidence.

See Newhouse v. Heckler,

753 F.2d 283, 286

(3d Cir. 1985) (“In light of this conflicting

medical evidence, the [ALJ] could reasonably find the lack of clinical data . . .

outweighed the [claimant’s] testimony . . . .”). Given that Das’s contemporaneous

medical records indicated that she was “asymptomatic” for anemia, not to mention the

additional records and statements provided by her physicians containing no indication

that her anemia and heavy menses impaired her livelihood in the manner to which she

testified, the ALJ’s severity determination was supported by substantial evidence

irrespective of Das’s subjective, minimally-relevant testimony.

Das also argues that the ALJ should have included limitations, such as additional

bathroom breaks, in her RFC because of her anemia and heavy menses. RFC is the most

an individual is still able to do despite their limitations.

20 C.F.R. § 404.1545

(a). An

ALJ must “assess and make a finding about [the claimant’s RFC] based on all the

relevant medical and other evidence” in the record.

20 C.F.R. § 404.1520

(e). The ALJ

must consider both severe and non-severe impairments when assessing an individual’s

RFC and the limitations considered as part of it.

20 C.F.R. § 404.1545

(a)(2). Das’s

argument that additional limitations needed to be included in her RFC fails because of the

inconsistent evidence in the record regarding Das’s anemia and heavy menses. Simply

put, for the same reason that substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s determination that

Das’s anemia and heavy menses is not a severe impairment, substantial evidence supports

9 the ALJ’s decision not to include any limitations in Das’s RFC related to Das’s anemia

and heavy menses.

We emphasize again, in conclusion, that our role on appeal is not to weigh Das’s

proffered medical records, lab tests, or testimony against the parts of the record cited by

the ALJ in her opinion. We instead assess only whether, looking at the record as a whole,

a reasonable mind might accept the ALJ’s evidence as adequate to support her conclusion

that Das’s conditions were not severe and did not require the inclusion of additional

limitations when formulating her RFC. Biestek,

139 S. Ct. at 1154

. We agree with the

District Court that the evidence cited by the ALJ, and particularly the contemporaneous

medical records indicating both affirmatively and by omission Das’s lack of symptoms,

was sufficient to meet this low threshold, irrespective of the evidence Das emphasizes

here.

III.

For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the order of the District Court.

10

Reference

Status
Unpublished