NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 06a0300n.06
Filed: May 1, 2006
No. 05-6237
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Wanda Watts, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
Commissioner of Social Security, ) EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
)
Defendant-Appellee. )
)
)
BEFORE: Keith, Merritt, and Daughtrey, Circuit Judges.
MERRITT, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff Wanda Watts appeals from a district court judgment
affirming the Commissioner’s decision to terminate her disability insurance benefits and her
supplemental security income benefits. Watts contends that the Commissioner has not adequately
demonstrated the required medical improvement in her condition since her last award of benefits in
1997. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court.
Watts filed an application for disability insurance benefits in 1992. An Administrative Law
Judge found Watts to have a “severe” impairment on the basis of “severe neck pain and thoracic
outlet syndrome” 1 that rendered her disabled commencing in April 1991. A continuing disability
1
Thoracic outlet syndrome is a combination of pain, numbness, tingling, weakness, or
coldness in the upper extremity caused by pressure on the nerves and/or blood vessels in the thoracic
outlet. The thoracic outlet is a space between the rib cage (thorax), and the collar bone (clavicle)
No. 05-6237
Watts v. Commissioner of Social Security
review was performed in August 1997. The records submitted at that time demonstrated that Watts
continued to suffer from disabling back problems and depression. Decision of Aug. 27, 1997. The
findings of disability in 1992 and 1997 are not in dispute. Another continuing disability review was
conducted in 2000 and in January 2001. Watts received a notice that her benefits would be
terminated because her health had improved since the last review and award of benefits in 1997.
Watts timely requested reconsideration of the decision, arguing that she continues to be disabled
because of thoracic outlet syndrome, depression, allergies, blood clots, back problems, high blood
pressure, chest pain and chronic bronchitis. Watts received a hearing in October 2001 before a
Disability Officer, who affirmed the decision in December 2001. Watts then requested a hearing
before an Administrative Law Judge, who found Watts was not disabled after January 1, 2001. The
ALJ found that Watts currently suffered from the combined “severe” impairments of degenerative
disc disease of the lumbar spine, a history of thoracic outlet syndrome, history of hypertension and
an unspecified anxiety disorder, but found that Watts had improved since the review in 1997. The
ALJ went on to conclude that Watts had the residual functional capacity for a limited range of light
through which the main blood vessels and nerves pass from the neck and thorax into the arm. The
syndrome is a set of symptoms and physical findings that point to a certain diagnosis. Various
symptoms and physical findings may be present in different grades of severity and all the symptoms
and physical findings are not always present. There are several causes of the syndrome, but the most
common underlying cause is compression of the nerves and arteries of the arm in the thoracic outlet.
In some cases the cause of compression is evident, such as an extra first rib or other congenital
abnormality, whiplash from a car accident or an old fracture of the clavicle, all of which may reduce
the space of the outlet. In other cases the cause is not clear. Compression may occur with repetitive
activities that require the arms to be held overhead. Source: Website of the Office of
Communications and Public Information, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
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Watts v. Commissioner of Social Security
work, including her past work as a florist. Decision of June 13, 2003. That decision became final
when the Appeals Council denied Watts’s request for review. Watts then sought judicial review in
the Eastern District of Kentucky. After the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, the
district court granted the Commissioner’s motion and affirmed the Commissioner’s decision to cease
benefits as of January 2001. Watts v. Barnhart, No. 04-233-GWU, Memorandum Opinion at 7 (E.D.
Ky June 23, 2005).2
We must accept the Secretary’s findings if they are supported by substantial evidence.
“Substantial evidence” is more than a scintilla of evidence but less than a preponderance. We do
not resolve conflicts in the evidence, nor decide questions of credibility. In determining the
existence of substantial evidence, we must examine the record as a whole. If the Secretary’s
decision is supported by substantial evidence, we must affirm even if we would decide the matter
differently and even if substantial evidence also supports the opposite conclusion. Cutlip v. Sec. of
Health and Human Servs., 25 F.3d 284, 286 (6th Cir. 1994); Nierzwick v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., No.
00-1575, 2001 WL 303522 (6th Cir. Mar. 19, 2001).
Moreover, there is no presumption of continuing disability. Cutlip, 25 F.3d at 286-87 & n.1.
Instead, the Secretary applies the procedures set out in 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1594 and 416.994. The
first part of the evaluative process, which is the issue in this appeal, is whether medical improvement
has been demonstrated. A claimant’s disability benefits may be terminated if there has been any
medical improvement, if the improvement is related to the ability to work, and if the claimant is
2
The district court’s Memorandum Opinion could not be located in the Joint Appendix.
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No. 05-6237
Watts v. Commissioner of Social Security
currently able to engage in substantial gainful activity. 20 C.F.R. § 404.1594(a). “Medical
improvement” is “any decrease in the medical severity of . . . impairment(s) [that] was present at
the time of the most recent favorable medical decision that [the claimant was] disabled or continued
to be disabled.” 20 C.F.R. § 404.1594(b)(1). A determination of medical improvement “must be
based on changes (improvement) in the symptoms, signs and/or laboratory findings associated with
your impairment(s).” And, a medical improvement is only related to an individual’s ability to work
“if there has been a decrease in the severity . . . of the impairment(s) present at the time of the most
recent favorable medical decision and an increase in your functional capacity to do basic work
activities.” 20 C.F.R. § 404.1594(b)(3).
This appeal turns on whether substantial evidence shows that there has been medical
improvement in Watts’ impairment. The August 1997 review serves as the comparison point
because it is the most recent favorable medical decision finding Watts to be disabled. The record
indicates that in 1997 Watts had x-ray evidence of degenerative disc disease, congenital fusion of
the cervical spine, and two ruptured discs and that she was recovering from a right rib resection
(removal of a rib) for thoracic outlet syndrome. Watts was suffering from chronic pain in her back
and lower extremities. She also suffered from chronic migraines. Her treating physician indicated
she was unable to sustain any lifting or carrying and that she had diminished capacity to stand or
walk. The decision in 2001 to terminate benefits was based on doctors’ reports from September and
December 2000. The ALJ used medical reports and testimony from treating and non-treating
doctors after 2000 and up to the time of the hearing to make his decision, as well as additional
information from medical reviewers about Watts’s functional capacity based on her medical records.
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No. 05-6237
Watts v. Commissioner of Social Security
The medical evidence reveals that by the late 1990s, Watts’s back problems were
diminishing and the symptoms from the thoracic outlet syndrome were improving. Both Watts and
her treating physician reported in 1999 that she was doing “pretty well.” She was taking only over-
the-counter pain relievers for pain at that time. In October 2000, Watts was referred to a doctor by
the Social Security Administration for a consultative examination. The only problems noted at that
time were continued back pain and some pain in the right arm, as well as depression. Watts was
comfortable in the sitting and supine positions; her neurological and vascular systems were normal.
Watts went to her treating physician in January 2001 for chest pain, but her heart and vascular
systems were normal. On a follow up visit in March 2001, the doctor prescribed allergy medication
to help with bronchitis, asthma and sinusitis. On visits to her treating physician in 2001, the doctor
noted continued pain from thoracic outlet syndrome, especially with overhead activities, but Watts’s
main complaints at that time seemed to stem from depression and respiratory ailments. Both of
these conditions were treated with prescription medication for allergies and depression, and Watts
noted some improvement in her mood by late 2001.
Watts fractured a vertebrae in August 2002 after attempting to lift a “pretty big” bag of
mulch. Medical reports after this incident and from ongoing follow-up visits in 2002 indicate
continued back and right side pain and moderate to marked osteoporosis, but no acute distress.
During 2002 and 2003, Watts continued to be treated for back pain, but by March 2003 she told her
treating physician that it was improving and her doctor said that she was making “good progress.”
Despite the pain, MRI scans and x-rays during this period indicate degenerative disc disease but no
other serious problem requiring surgery or other treatment. Both Watts’s treating physicians and
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Watts v. Commissioner of Social Security
the consultative physicians have noted that Watts has normal range of motion in the neck, mild
limitation of motion in the back, right arm and hips, no atrophy, no spasms, no motor weakness and
good grip strength. Neurologic tests continued to be normal.
The record demonstrates that Watts has undergone no hospitalization during this period and
that her daily activities demonstrate that she is not totally disabled. During the relevant period,
Watts went for treatment twice after injuring herself while attempting vigorous activity. In 1999, she
was treated for a large splinter in her finger that occurred while she was cleaning baseboards, and
in 2002, she was treated for back pain after she tried to lift a bag of mulch. Both of these injuries
demonstrate that Watts believed she was able to tend her garden and undertake strenuous household
chores. She therefore engages in at least some physical activity and other aspects of her daily
routine are not incompatible with sedentary work.
In response to the medical evidence, Watts argues that because she still has pain and medical
problems that have been labeled “severe,” there has been no medical improvement. While we
acknowledge that Watts undoubtedly still has pain and unresolved medical issues, neither her
treating physicians nor the consultative physicians have stated that she has not improved since 1997.
As stated above, we do not undertake a de novo review of the evidence or resolve conflicts in the
evidence. Watts has pointed to no new evidence or evidence that was overlooked in the proceedings
below. Given our limited review powers in this case, we must affirm the Commissioner’s decision
if substantial evidence supports that determination, which it does. We also wish to note, as did the
district court below, that the depression and respiratory problems Watts now complains of were not
part of the 1992 or 1997 favorable disability decisions. These ailments seem to have surfaced since
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No. 05-6237
Watts v. Commissioner of Social Security
the last favorable decision in 1997, and they do not alter our review of the findings of the ALJ. We
look primarily to evidence demonstrating the improvement in the thoracic outlet syndrome and back
pain that formed the basis of Watts’s original application in 1992 and the continuation of benefits
in 1997, and we find substantial evidence in the record that these conditions have improved.
It is clear that Watts was disabled in 1992 and that her condition did not improve, and may
have in fact worsened, by the time of the disability review in 1997. However, by the close of the
1990s, the evidence, taken as a whole, suggests that Watts’s primary complaint in her 1992 disability
application and in the disability review process in 1997, thoracic outlet syndrome, was improving.
Her symptoms have subsided and the medical reports indicate improvement. As for her ability to
work, none of Watts’s treating doctors during the relevant period (except Dr. Golden in a brief
reference to limitations on overhead reaching) made detailed functional capacity analyses, which
leaves the functional capacity forms from the medical reviewers as the best evidence. Their reports
provide substantial evidence that Watts is capable of a limited range of light work, including her past
work as a florist, as found by the ALJ.
The Commissioner’s decision is supported by substantial evidence and in accordance with
law and is therefore affirmed.
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