Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca6-15-02364/USCOURTS-ca6-15-02364-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Commissioner of Social Security
Appellee
Robert Gibbens
Appellant

Document Text:

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION

File Name: 16a0472n.06

No. 15-2364

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

ROBERT GIBBENS,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

COMMISSIONER OF SOCIAL SECURITY,

Defendant-Appellee.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE 

UNITED STATES DISTRICT 

COURT FOR THE WESTERN 

DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN

OPINION

BEFORE: GILMAN, WHITE, and STRANCH, Circuit Judges.

JANE B. STRANCH, Circuit Judge. Appellant Robert Gibbens challenges the 

decision of the Commissioner of Social Security to deny his claim for disability benefits. He 

contends that the administrative law judge who presided over his hearing erred by (1) rejecting

the medical opinion of his treating physician, and (2) formulating hypothetical questions for the 

vocational expert that did not accurately reflect his limitations in concentration, persistence, and 

pace. Because the Commissioner’s decision is supported by substantial evidence, we AFFIRM 

the judgment of the district court.

I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Gibbens applied for disability insurance benefits on June 27, 2007, and supplemental 

security income on October 2, 2007, alleging disability since March 1, 2006. At the time, he was

twenty-five years old. Gibbens claimed that conditions in his lower back, left arm, and right 

knee limit his ability to work, as do attention deficit disorder and a learning disability. In a 

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disability report filed a few months later, he noted a further decline in memory and physical 

condition that reduced his ability to care for himself or his children.

Gibbens’s application was denied initially in January 2008, and by decision after an 

administrative hearing in October 2009. The Appeals Council vacated the decision and 

remanded with instructions to the administrative law judge (ALJ) to further evaluate Gibbens’s 

mental impairment and obesity, consider his residual functional capacity with “specific reference 

to evidence of record in support of the assessed limitations,” and to obtain evidence from a 

vocational expert clarifying the effect of these limitations on his ability to work.

A second ALJ presided over the hearing on remand and denied Gibbens’s application for 

benefits at the final step of the disability analysis. The ALJ concluded that, despite Gibbens’s

severe impairments and significant functional limitations that precluded past relevant work,

Gibbens retained the capacity to perform a limited range of sedentary work. The Appeals 

Council denied Gibbens’s request for review on July 1, 2014, making the ALJ’s decision the 

final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security. The district court affirmed.1

II. FACTS 

As the result of a brachial plexus injury at birth, Gibbens is afflicted by Erb’s Palsy of the 

left upper extremity, which causes deformation and decreased mobility. Gibbens has also been 

diagnosed with borderline intellectual functioning and a probable learning disability. He 

completed the eleventh grade and asserts that he attended special education classes throughout

school. Gibbens states that he intended to pursue his GED at one point, but did not think he 

could do it and was unable to after starting a family.

 

1Gibbens’s motion for summary judgment before the district court claimed that the ALJ erred on four counts, but 

only two of those form the basis of his appeal. We generally do not review arguments raised before the district court 

but not raised on appeal, thus only the two issues before us are considered. See, e.g., Robinson v. Jones, 142 F.3d 

905, 906 (6th Cir. 1998).

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Gibbens has been married since 2003 and lives with his wife and two children. He 

enjoys a good relationship with family and visits with friends regularly. Gibbens requires 

assistance with things like bathing and tying his shoes because he has little to no use of his left 

arm and hand. However, he is able to help care for his children and complete some household 

chores. Gibbens likes to watch television and use the computer. He takes naps frequently 

because he suffers from sleep apnea and fatigues easily due to persistent pain. Since the alleged 

onset of his disabling conditions, Gibbens has intermittently relied on a cane or walker to 

ambulate. His wife handles the family’s finances.

Gibbens worked as a cart pusher and truck unloader at Walmart from approximately 2004 

to early 2006, but quit due to back and arm pain. He then worked briefly in another manual 

labor position until approximately May 2006.

2

 He has not worked since this time.

A. Medical History

In 2007, Gibbens experienced growing discomfort in his left arm and fingers from

numbness and tingling that dissipated when he shook his hand. A subsequent examination, 

which included a nerve conduction study and electromyography (EMG), revealed abnormality in 

his median, ulnar, and left radial nerves, as well as chronic denervation.

Gibbens first met with his treating physician, Dr. Katalin Szloboda, in June 2012. Dr. 

Szloboda noted that Gibbens was morbidly obese and had been diagnosed with type II diabetes

the previous year. An MRI administered the following week indicated that Gibbens suffered 

from multilevel lumbar spondylosis. Despite these challenges, Gibbens’s condition appears to 

have improved under Dr. Szloboda’s care. At a July 2012 follow-up examination, Dr. Szloboda

observed that Gibbens’s diabetes was “doing much better” now that he was on a good diet, 

losing weight, and taking his medications. Gibbens’s arthritis also improved, but he continued to 

 

2Gibbens stated elsewhere in the record that he worked until 2003, but this appears to be a misunderstanding.

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experience significant back pain. Dr. Szloboda referred Gibbens to neurosurgeon Dr. Coccia, 

who determined in fall 2012 that Gibbens’s symptoms were not related to degenerative disc 

disease and that surgery was unnecessary. Dr. Coccia recommended possible epidural injections 

and physical therapy for pain management.

A short time after his neurosurgery evaluation, Gibbens was sent to the emergency room 

when he experienced a sudden onset of weakness and numbness in both legs after he “felt a pop” 

while getting into his car. He rated his pain around that time as nine on a ten-point scale. 

Gibbens was discharged with a prescription for physical therapy and noted “some significant 

improvement” after one month, including decreased pain and greater mobility. Two months 

later, he was described as “doing well,” and reported that he never felt pain beyond a five or six, 

though he continued to experience numbness in his lower legs. An EMG taken around this time 

revealed no significant abnormality.

Gibbens underwent a cervical fusion in January 2013. When he was discharged the 

following day, “[h]is preoperative pain ha[d] mostly resolved.” At the time of the hearing, 

Gibbens had not yet seen the surgeon for a follow-up evaluation. The record contains no 

significant medical events after this date.

B. The Administrative Hearing

Gibbens testified at the administrative hearing that, although he had always suffered pain 

in his neck, shoulders, lower back, and knees, his condition had worsened since 2009 when he 

began seeking treatment from specialists. He testified that his wife helped him bathe, that he 

could not drive long distances, clean, shop, or do laundry, and that he could cook only “very 

little.” Gibbens visited the emergency room three times between 2009 and 2010 for pain in his 

neck, shoulders, and upper back. He testified that he did not think the cervical fusion procedure 

the month prior had helped, though he understood that it was still early and that he may yet 

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regain feeling in his legs. Gibbens noted that he did not like to go out because people stare at 

him. Finally, he explained that his chronic pain, lower extremity numbness, and fatigue were 

particularly troubling because they kept him from spending time with his children.

The ALJ posed three hypothetical questions to a vocational expert. First, he described a 

person of Gibbens’s age, level of education and work experience, who is,

unable to lift and carry more than 10 pounds frequently, 20 pounds 

occasionally, would be unable to climb ladders, ropes, and

scaffolds, unable to have effective use of left upper extremity, 

that’s non-dominant. . . . 

Unable to climb stairs, balance, stoop, kneel, crouch or crawl more 

than occasionally, would need to avoid concentrated exposure to 

vibration and hazards, would be unable to maintain the attention or 

concentration necessary to perform detailed or complex tasks. And 

unable to have more than occasional interaction with co-workers, 

supervisors, or the public.

The vocational expert confirmed that there was work available that a hypothetical individual 

with these limitations could perform, including order filler, shipping clerk, and production 

inspector.

The ALJ then asked the vocational expert to consider the same hypothetical individual 

with the added limitations that he could not lift or carry more than ten pounds, could not stand or 

walk for more than two hours during an eight-hour workday, and would require use of a cane to 

walk. The vocational expert responded that there were jobs available in the economy for this 

hypothetical individual including packer, inspector, and production helper. Finally, the ALJ 

added a last limitation to both of the prior hypotheticals—the individual required unscheduled 

breaks of undetermined duration. The vocational expert testified that this limitation would 

preclude all competitive employment.

Gibbens’s attorney asked the vocational expert to consider the first hypothetical 

individual with the added limitation that he could “not do any report completion, even to the 

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point of counting, and no use of computers, [or] laptops for operation.” The vocational expert 

found that this would eliminate some of the representative examples he had offered, like 

shipping clerk positions, but that the hypothetical individual could still work in positions like 

order filler or production inspector. The ALJ asked whether those positions were still available 

if the same hypothetical individual required a cane to ambulate. The vocational expert 

responded that this limitation eliminated employment.

C. The Decision of the Social Security Commissioner

The ALJ denied Gibbens’s claim for benefits in a written decision on April 3, 2013. He 

noted as a preliminary matter that Gibbens met the insured status requirements of the Social 

Security Act until September 20, 2011. At the first step of the sequential evaluation process, 

20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1520(a), 416.920(a), the ALJ found that Gibbens had not engaged in 

substantial gainful activity since the alleged onset of his disability on March 1, 2006. At the 

second step, the ALJ concluded that Gibbens suffered from several severe impairments, 

including Erb’s Palsy of the left upper extremity, obesity, peripheral neuropathy, diabetes, 

cervical and lumbar degenerative disc disease, general anxiety disorder, attention deficit 

hyperactivity disorder, dysthymia, and borderline intellectual functioning. At step three, the ALJ 

determined that Gibbens’s impairments, or combination of impairments, did not meet or 

medically equal one of the impairments listed in 20 C.F.R. Part 404, Subpart P, Appendix 1. 

20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1520(d), 404.1525, 404.1526.

The ALJ found at step four that Gibbens retained the residual functional capacity to 

perform sedentary work with a number of nonexertional limitations:

unable to have effective use of the left upper extremity except to 

assist the right with lifting; unable to climb ladders, ropes or 

scaffolds; only occasional balancing, stooping, kneeling, crouching 

or crawling; must be able to use a cane to ambulate; must avoid 

concentrated exposure to vibration or hazards; unable to maintain 

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the attention or concentration necessary to perform detailed or 

complex tasks; only occasional interaction with co-workers, 

supervisors or the public.

The ALJ found that Gibbens’s medically determinable physical and mental impairments could 

reasonably be expected to cause the symptoms he alleged, but that Gibbens’s statements 

concerning their intensity, persistence, and limiting effects were not entirely credible. In 

particular, the ALJ gave little weight to the opinion of Gibbens’s treating physician, Dr. 

Szloboda, because her assessment was not supported by objective medical evidence.

At step five, the ALJ concluded, based on the testimony of the vocational expert, that 

significant numbers of jobs existed in the regional and national economy that Gibbens could 

perform. Though Gibbens could not perform his past relevant manual labor work, his status as a 

younger individual, 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1563, 416.963, and his residual functional capacity in 

conjunction with the Medical Vocational Guidelines, 20 C.F.R. Part 404, Subpart P, Appendix 2, 

indicated that he could perform a range of light work. Thus, the ALJ concluded that Gibbens 

was not eligible for benefits and denied his application.

The Appeals Council denied Gibbens’s request for review. The district court affirmed.

III. ANALYSIS

The district court’s disability benefits determination is reviewed de novo. Gayheart v. 

Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 710 F.3d 365, 374 (6th Cir. 2013). We uphold the Social Security 

Commissioner’s decision if it “is supported by substantial evidence” and “made pursuant to 

proper legal standards.” Rogers v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 486 F.3d 234, 241 (6th Cir. 2007). 

Substantial evidence lies between a preponderance and a scintilla; it refers to relevant evidence 

that “a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Id. Even if an ALJ’s 

findings are justified on the record, a “failure to follow agency rules and regulations denotes a 

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lack of substantial evidence.” Cole v. Astrue, 661 F.3d 931, 937 (6th Cir. 2011) (internal 

quotation marks omitted).

The Social Security Act defines a person who is “disabled” as one whose “physical or 

mental impairment or impairments are of such severity that he is not only unable to do his 

previous work but cannot, considering his age, education, and work experience, engage in any 

other kind of substantial gainful work which exists in the national economy.” 42 U.S.C. 

§ 423(d)(2)(A). To qualify, a claimant must establish the existence of a medically determinable 

physical or mental impairment that could be expected to result in death or that has lasted or could 

be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than twelve months, and that such 

impairment(s) render such claimant unable to engage in any substantial gainful activity. 

Id. § 423(d)(1)(A).

A. The Treating Physician’s Opinion

Due to the unique nature of the “ongoing treatment relationship” between a patient and 

his doctor, the medical opinion of an applicant’s treating physician is afforded special 

consideration under the Social Security Act. See 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1502, 404.1527(c)(2). The 

Act recognizes that a treating physician is best placed “to provide a detailed, longitudinal picture 

of [a claimant’s] medical impairment(s)” and “may bring a unique perspective to the medical 

evidence that cannot be obtained from the objective medical findings alone or from reports of 

individual examinations, such as consultative examinations or brief hospitalizations.” Id.

§ 404.1527(c)(2).

A treating physician’s opinion on the nature and severity of a claimant’s impairment(s) is 

given controlling weight if it “is well-supported by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory 

diagnostic techniques and is not inconsistent with the other substantial evidence in [the] case 

record.” Id. If not, the ALJ evaluates the opinion with reference to a number of factors

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including: “the length of the treatment relationship and the frequency of examination, the nature 

and extent of the treatment relationship, supportability of the opinion, consistency of the opinion 

with the record as a whole, and the specialization of the treating source.” Wilson v. Comm’r of 

Soc. Sec., 378 F.3d 541, 544 (6th Cir. 2004); see also 20 C.F.R. § 404.1527(c)(2) (listing 

factors). The ALJ’s decision “must contain specific reasons for the weight given to the treating 

source’s medical opinion, supported by the evidence in the case record, and must be sufficiently 

specific to make clear to any subsequent reviewers the weight the adjudicator gave to the treating 

source’s medical opinion and the reasons for that weight.” SSR 96-2p, 1996 WL 374188, at *5 

(July 2, 1996).

Gibbens contends that the ALJ erred by rejecting the opinion of his treating physician, 

Dr. Szloboda. Although the ALJ stated explicitly that he afforded Dr. Szloboda’s opinion little 

weight based on four discrete reasons, Gibbens asserts that the ALJ did not satisfy the treating 

physician rule because his justifications were cherry-picked from the record, do not address the 

enumerated regulatory factors, and do not constitute “good reasons.” See 20 C.F.R. 

§ 404.1527(c)(2) (requiring a decision to provide “good reasons” when controlling weight is not 

given to a treating source opinion); see also Cole, 661 F.3d at 937 (explaining the good reasons

requirement is a “safeguard [on] the claimant’s procedural rights,” and more than “simply a 

formality”). Failure to comply with the treating physician rule requires reversal, even when 

“substantial evidence otherwise supports the decision,” unless the error is harmless. Wilson, 

378 F.3d at 544, 547; see also Cole, 661 F.3d at 940 (noting circumstances in which violation of 

the rule may constitute harmless error).

Dr. Szloboda submitted two letters in support of Gibbens’s disability claim. The first, 

written in December 2012, six months after Dr. Szloboda began treating Gibbens, states

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generally that Gibbens is “unable to keep a meaningful job because of his condition”—which she 

noted included diabetes, low thyroid, degenerative disc disease causing chronic pain, peripheral 

neuropathy, weakness in the lower extremities, and Erb’s palsy—and that he should be 

considered for disability. Two months later, Dr. Szloboda followed up with a second letter in 

which she reiterated Gibbens’s medical conditions in slightly more detail and predicted that, 

despite undergoing a cervical fusion the month before, the neurological symptoms that Gibbens 

had experienced for years would continue “for the foreseeable future.” Dr. Szloboda opined that, 

“[b]ased upon all of his conditions and physical limitations and restrictions, he should be eligible 

for social security disability.”

Dr. Szloboda attached a physical residual functional capacity assessment to the second

letter that listed the following exertional limitations: no use of left arm, lift or carry less than ten 

pounds in right arm, stand or walk for a total of less than two hours in an eight-hour work day, 

and sit for a total of one to two hours in an eight-hour workday. The assessment further noted 

that Gibbens could never climb, balance, kneel, crouch or crawl, but could occasionally stoop, 

and that he had limited manipulative abilities. However, no visual or communicative limitations

were listed.

The ALJ listed four reasons for giving Dr. Szloboda’s opinion little weight. First, he 

found that the record evidence did not support her opinion regarding Gibbens’s neuropathy. As 

stated in her second letter: “As a result of [Gibbens’s] diabetes as well as contributed to by his 

degenerative disk [sic] disease, he has peripheral neuropathy and weakness in both lower 

extremities. This was tested by EMG.” In fact, the EMG, performed after Gibbens began to 

experience increasing lower back pain and numbness from the waist down, “failed to reveal 

significant abnormality.” Dr. Johnson, who administered the EMG, observed that “[t]he etiology 

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of [Gibbens’s] symptoms remains uncertain.” He was unable to find the signs of large fiber 

neuropathy and, while small fiber neuropathies could “be elusive on EMG,” this also seemed 

“less likely” given the position of Gibbens’s symptoms. Dr. Johnson concluded the case was 

“somewhat quizzical.”

In light of Dr. Johnson’s interpretation, Dr. Szloboda’s reference to the EMG provides 

little support for her diagnosis of neuropathy; the ALJ found it “difficult to understand Dr. 

Szloboda’s conclusion, regarding her diagnosis of neuropathy, when the EMG gives no basis for 

it.” To the extent that her opinion was “based (at least in part) on the erroneous assumption that 

an EMG supports a finding of neuropathy, when it does not,” the ALJ gave little credit to Dr. 

Szloboda’s opinion on this count.

Gibbens maintains that Dr. Szloboda’s reference to the EMG is not an “erroneous 

statement.” He notes that the EMG results indicated vibratory sensation loss, and that 

small-fiber neuropathy is difficult to diagnose in this manner. Although the EMG produced 

negative results, “it could not establish conclusively the source of Gibbens’[s] neuropathy,” and 

no medical expert has explicitly disagreed with that diagnosis, thus, Gibbens concludes that “the 

AJL’s finding is, at best, speculative.”

Gibbens misunderstands the ALJ’s concern on this count. The ALJ did not dispute the 

neuropathy diagnosis—in fact, he found it to be a severe impairment. Instead, Dr. Szloboda’s

citation to the EMG, which did not support the referenced diagnosis, indicates that her medical 

opinion—at least insofar as it concerns neuropathy—is not supported by a clinical diagnostic 

technique. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.1527(c)(2). Moreover, this aspect of her opinion is inconsistent 

with other substantial evidence in the medical record, specifically Dr. Johnson’s finding that the 

EMG results were normal and that small fiber neuropathy, though difficult to detect, was “less 

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likely” given the location of Gibbens’s symptoms. The ALJ’s reasoning on this point is 

supported by substantial evidence and satisfies the good reasons requirement for giving less 

weight to Dr. Szloboda’s opinion. See Key v. Callahan, 109 F.3d 270, 273 (6th Cir. 1997) 

(noting that the ALJ’s decision “is not subject to reversal, even if there is substantial evidence in 

the record that would have supported an opposite conclusion, so long as substantial evidence 

supports the conclusion reached by the ALJ”).

The second reason that the ALJ afforded Dr. Szloboda’s opinion little weight is that her 

prognosis regarding Gibbens’s upper extremity pain failed to take into account Gibbens’s recent 

cervical discectomy, which the ALJ concluded “should alleviate some, if not all of his upper 

extremity pain.” Gibbens’s January 2013 cervical discectomy and fusion was undertaken to 

address his severe C6-7 cervical spinal stenosis and mild cord compression, which he reported 

caused growing pain in his shoulders and arms during the year prior. Evidence in the record 

indicates that the operation was a success. When Gibbens was discharged the following day, he 

was able to walk and reported that his preoperative pain had “mostly resolved,” though he had 

some residual pain related to surgery. With this in mind, Dr. Szloboda’s assessment made the 

following month that Gibbens would continue to experience his preoperative symptoms “for the 

foreseeable future” is puzzling, particularly in the absence of any explanation as to why she 

thought the discectomy and fusion would have no ameliorative effect.

Gibbens contends that the ALJ’s assertion amounts to “playing doctor” because the ALJ 

substitutes his own medical findings for those of Gibbens’s treating physician. An ALJ may not 

“play doctor.” However, the post-surgery records support the ALJ’s conclusion. Though 

Gibbens testified at the administrative hearing that he saw no change in his condition, he agreed 

that it was early to judge while he was still healing. Moreover, we read the ALJ’s finding on this 

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issue in the context of other record evidence, described above, that indicates Gibbens’s 

degenerative disc disease has often been manageable. Substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s 

reasoning.

The third reason that the ALJ declined to give Dr. Szloboda’s opinion controlling weight 

was the lack of evidentiary support for her physical residual functional capacity assessment, 

specifically, the exertional limitation that Gibbens could sit for only one to two hours per day. 

Instead, the ALJ found Gibbens’s “lumbar degenerative disc disease is rather mild with no 

evidence of neurological abnormalities.” He found little record support for Dr. Szloboda’s 

assessment that Gibbens could sit for only one to two hours in an eight-hour workday. In 

response, Gibbens directs the court to the many instances in the record where his disc 

degeneration is characterized as severe and notes that “no one stated that his lumbar spine 

problem[s] were mild.”

The record is split on this point. A June 2012 examination and MRI revealed lumbar 

spondylosis and moderate-to-severe central canal stenosis at L4-5. But in a July examination, 

Dr. Szloboda characterized Gibbens, while in distress due to back pain, as “otherwise doing 

pretty well.” In October of the same year, Dr. Szloboda reported that she did not think Gibbens’s

“mild amount of stenosis at the L4-5 level is directly related to his clinical symptoms.” She 

noted that Dr. Coccia, who did not think surgery was necessary, agreed with her and had 

characterized Gibbens’s complaints as “diffuse and nonspecific.” Around that time, Gibbens 

went to the emergency room complaining of weakness and numbness in both legs after he 

injured himself getting out of a car. His condition improved significantly after physical therapy, 

which helped him to walk more easily and increased his spinal flexibility. Yet, he did not regain 

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full sensation below the knees. By the end of 2012, Gibbens reported during an examination that 

he was “doing well” and never experienced pain beyond five or six on a scale of ten.

Our review of this mixed evidence is not intended to minimize Gibbens’s ordeal. The 

mere presence of “periodic improvements and cessation of treatment” cannot support an ALJ’s 

decision to discount the severity of a claimant’s medical condition when the ALJ fails to 

consider other record evidence of declining health. Gentry v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 741 F.3d 

708, 723-24 (6th Cir. 2014) (holding that the ALJ erred by discounting claimant’s impairments 

on the basis that she ceased certain treatments where her decision to go without those

prescriptions was driven by serious side effects of her medication rather than recovery). 

However, that is not the circumstance in the present case. Our standard of review requires that 

we uphold the Commissioner’s decision if it is supported by substantial evidence—as long as a 

reasonable mind might accept the proffered evidence as adequate to support the ALJ’s 

determination. Rogers, 486 F.3d at 241. That standard is met here.

The fourth and final reason that the ALJ declined to give controlling weight to Dr. 

Szloboda’s opinion is that her assessment of his limitations differed from the opinion of the state 

agency consultant. The physical residual functional capacity assessment completed by 

consultant Dr. Tanna in early 2008 noted that Gibbens could perform unskilled light work that 

did not require the use of his left arm, only occasional overhead reaching with his right arm, and 

that allowed for use of a cane during prolonged ambulation.

The ALJ acknowledged that Dr. Tanna’s assessment was made five years prior to the 

hearing, but gave it significant weight because there was “little evidence that [Gibbens’s] 

objective medical condition has changed much in recent years.” This is not to say that Gibbens 

experienced no changes to his health in the intervening time. As acknowledged in the decision, 

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Gibbens experienced both increasing pain and periods of respite. He went to the emergency 

room three times for neck pain and once for numbness in his legs. He saw multiple specialists 

and underwent a cervical fusion. However, Gibbens also gained control of his diabetes and lost 

weight, experienced a decrease in back pain from a nine on a scale of ten to five or six, and 

improved his gait significantly with the help of a physical therapist.

On this record, reasonable minds could conclude that the evidence supports Dr. Tanna’s 

opinion regarding Gibbens’s physical limitations over Dr. Szloboda’s more restrictive functional 

limitations. The record as reviewed by Dr. Tanna in January 2008 included the immediately 

preceding physical examination performed by medical consultant Dr. Abel in December 2007, 

and conforms to that opinion. Dr. Abel observed full grip and pincher grasp in Gibbens’s right 

hand with only mild digital dexterity loss, normal gait without assistance, and no difficulty 

heel-toe walking, balancing, squatting, or rising. Dr. Abel further indicated that, although

Gibbens had suffered back pain as a teenager and had never been able to use his left arm or 

shoulder, he was generally “independent with his activities of daily living,” and could drive, 

prepare simple meals, perform some chores around the house, walk two blocks, and climb a 

flight of stairs. The opinions of two state psychological consultants prepared in 2006 and 2007 

reached similar conclusions based on Gibbens’s own reports of his abilities.

State agency medical consultants are “highly qualified physicians and psychologists who 

are experts in the evaluation of the medical issues in disability claims under the [Social Security] 

Act”; thus, in some cases, “an ALJ may assign greater weight to a state agency consultant’s 

opinion than to that of a treating . . . source.” Miller v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 811 F.3d 825, 834 

(6th Cir. 2016) (first alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). We are more 

likely to uphold a decision to this effect when the consultant conducts an in-person examination 

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rather than formulating an opinion based solely on a review of the medical record. See 20 C.F.R. 

§ 404.1527(c)(1). Where a non-examining source “did not review a complete case record, ‘we 

require some indication that the ALJ at least considered these facts before giving greater 

weight’” to that opinion. Miller, 811 F.3d at 834 (quoting Blakley v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 

581 F.3d 399, 409 (6th Cir. 2009)).

The ALJ has satisfied this requirement. Though, as noted in the decision, Dr. Tanna’s

assessment was completed in 2008, the ALJ’s own analysis clearly spanned the entire record—

through the final degenerative changes to Gibbens’s spine that culminated in a cervical 

discectomy and fusion, the last medical event included in the record. The decision was informed 

by both Dr. Tanna’s assessment and the findings of Dr. Abel’s complete physical examination, 

as well as medical evidence later entered into the record, including Dr. Johnson’s interpretation 

of the EMG, the initial neurosurgery evaluation by Dr. Coccia and his notes following the 2013 

surgery, and the observations of Gibbens’s physical therapy team.

Finally, insofar as Dr. Tanna’s assessment contradicts Dr. Szloboda’s conclusion that 

Gibbens is eligible for Social Security benefits, Dr. Szloboda’s opinion is not controlling. While 

“[a] doctor’s conclusion that a patient is disabled from all work may be considered,” it is not 

“given special significance because it may invade the ultimate disability issue reserved to the 

Commissioner.” Gentry, 741 F.3d at 727 (internal quotation marks omitted).

To the extent that Gibbens challenges the ALJ’s treatment of Dr. Szloboda’s medical 

assessment rather than her conclusion that he is disabled, our review looks to whether the 

findings of the Commissioner are supported by the record as a whole. Shelman v. Heckler, 821 

F.2d 316, 320 (6th Cir. 1987). The ALJ’s consideration of the 20 C.F.R. § 404.1527(c)(2) 

factors was sufficient to enable our review on appeal. We find that the ALJ’s weighing of Dr. 

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Szloboda’s opinion—and his determination that it was not supported by medically accepted 

diagnostic techniques or objective evidence—for the four distinct reasons articulated in the 

decision, demonstrates that the ALJ considered the appropriate regulatory factors and is 

supported by substantial evidence. See Key, 109 F.3d at 273.

3

B. Hypothetical Questions Posed To the Vocational Expert 

In his second challenge to the decision, Gibbens contends that the ALJ did not provide

the vocational expert with complete hypothetical questions that accurately incorporated 

limitations to Gibbens’s concentration, persistence, and pace. In response, the Commissioner 

avers that the questions posed, and the decision’s conclusion on residual functional capacity for 

sedentary work, were accurate and complete.

In addition to considering a claimant’s subjective complaints and the objective medical 

evidence in the record, an ALJ may present hypothetical questions to a vocational expert “on the 

basis of his own assessment if he reasonably deems the claimant’s testimony to be inaccurate.” 

Jones v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 336 F.3d 469, 476 (6th Cir. 2003). The ALJ may rely on the 

vocational expert’s testimony in response. See Longworth v. Comm’r Soc. Sec. Admin., 402 F.3d 

591, 596 (6th Cir. 2005) (citing 20 C.F.R. § 416.960(b)-(c)). In order to constitute substantial 

evidence that the claimant can perform work available in the national economy, the ALJ’s 

questions to the vocational expert must “accurately portray[] [the claimant’s] individual physical 

and mental impairments.’” Howard v. Comm’r of Soc. Sec., 276 F.3d 235, 238 (6th Cir. 2002) 

(quoting Varley v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., 820 F.2d 777, 779 (6th Cir. 1987)).

 

3To the extent Gibbens argues that the ALJ erred because, in disregarding Dr. Szloboda’s opinion, he “failed to 

account for pain at all,” that argument is unsupported by the record. The ALJ’s opinion demonstrates that he 

considered Gibbens’s claims of pain, and concluded that although Gibbens’s “medically determinable impairments 

could reasonably be expected to cause the alleged symptoms[,] . . . [Gibbens’s] statements concerning the intensity, 

persistence and limiting effects of these symptoms are not entirely credible for the reasons explained in th[e] 

decision.”

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Gibbens argues that the ALJ’s finding regarding his “moderate difficulties” with 

concentration, persistence, or pace were not reflected in questions to the vocational expert. To 

review, all three questions posed by the ALJ to the vocational expert contemplated a hypothetical 

individual who “would be unable to maintain the attention or concentration necessary to perform 

detailed or complex tasks” and was “unable to have more than occasional interaction with coworkers, supervisors, or the public.” The third hypothetical added that the individual would need 

unscheduled breaks of undetermined duration. The first two limitations correlated to the ALJ’s

finding that Gibbens had “moderate difficulties” with regard to concentration, persistence, or 

pace, specifically that Gibbens “is functioning with borderline intellectual capabilities but has 

demonstrated the capacity for unskilled work.”

Gibbens relies on Ealy v. Commissioner of Social Security, where we found that a 

vocational expert’s testimony that Ealy could work in a number of unskilled jobs did not serve as 

substantial evidence for the ALJ’s conclusion that Ealy could in fact perform such work because 

the hypothetical question posed to the vocational expert inadequately described Ealy’s 

limitations. 594 F.3d 504, 517 (6th Cir. 2010). A state psychological consultant limited Ealy’s 

ability to focus on a simple, repetitive task to two-hour segments in an eight-hour workday where 

speed was not critical. Id. at 516. On the basis of this opinion, and other record evidence, the 

ALJ determined that Ealy had “moderate difficulties” with concentration, persistence, or pace. 

Id. at 510. Despite this finding, the ALJ’s hypothetical question asked the vocational expert, in 

relevant part, to “assume this person [is] limited to simple, repetitive tasks and instructions in 

non-public work settings.” Id. at 516 (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).

On appeal, we distinguished Ealy’s claim from that in Smith v. Halter, 307 F.3d 377, 379 

(6th Cir. 2001), in which we upheld the ALJ’s omission of a concentration limitation in a 

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hypothetical question where the ALJ found that the weight of the medical evidence went against 

the single physician who opined on that impairment. Ealy, 594 F.3d at 517. The ALJ 

considering Ealy’s claim, however, accepted the assessment of the state psychological consultant 

and then “streamlined” the hypothetical to omit “these speed- and pace-based restrictions 

completely” such that the hypothetical question did not accurately portray Ealy’s mental 

impairment. Id. at 516-17.

We agree with Gibbens that Ealy is applicable to the current case, but read it to support 

the Commissioner’s position. Contrary to Gibbens’s argument that the present hypothetical 

question conveyed only a limitation to simple, routine, or unskilled work, which “does not 

always equate with the difficulty of staying on task,” we read the ALJ’s proposed limitations 

regarding (1) an inability to concentrate and short attention span, and (2) limited capacity for 

interaction with others to directly reflect Gibbens’s moderate difficulties with concentration,

persistence, and pace based on his borderline intellectual capabilities.

The most conservative opinion regarding Gibbens’s mental limitations comes from 

Michael Varney, allegedly a licensed clinical professional counselor who regularly met with 

Gibbens.4 Varney completed a number of physical and psychological evaluations concluding 

that Gibbens had extreme mental and physical limitations.

The ALJ was highly skeptical of Varney, given a number of discrepancies in his 

background and opinion. While Varney called himself a “psychologist” in medical source 

statements, he was elsewhere identified as “LLP, CAP,” and was referred to as a Licensed 

Clinical Professional Counselor by Gibbens’s attorney. His psychological evaluations submitted 

in 2009 and 2010 appeared to be identical, with the exception of one alteration to the final 

 

4Varney was also appointed Gibbens’s representative for at least a portion of the administrative proceedings and 

filed the request for hearing on Gibbens’s behalf.

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paragraph. On this basis, the ALJ gave Varney’s opinion that Gibbens could not perform any 

type of work “no weight whatsoever as there is no indication that Mr. Varney has any physical 

medical training at all.” Gibbens does not challenge this conclusion on appeal.

The hypothetical questions posed to the vocational expert at the hearing fairly portrayed 

Gibbens’s limitations as supported by objective evidence. See Ealy, 594 F.3d at 516. To the 

extent that the questions did not reflect the limitations offered by Varney, which were unique to 

the record in the extent to which they diminished Gibbens’s mental functioning, the ALJ found 

his opinion to be not credible. Therefore, the ALJ was under no obligation to include Varney’s 

limitations in his examination of the vocational expert. See Casey v. Sec. of Health and Human 

Servs., 987 F.2d 1230, 1235 (6th Cir. 1993) (noting it is “well established” that an ALJ need 

“incorporate only those limitations accepted as credible by the finder of fact” into hypothetical 

questions asked of a vocational expert).

Because the hypothetical questions adequately represented the ALJ’s assessment of 

Gibbens’s limitations in concentration, persistence, and pace, we find that Gibbens’s second 

claim lacks merit. See Longworth, 402 F.3d at 596 (disposing of a claim that the ALJ’s 

hypothetical failed to take into account claimant’s shoulder problems when, in fact, the question

described an individual who could not reach overhead or complete a task requiring heavy 

grasping because of shoulder limitations).

IV. CONCLUSION

We arrive at our conclusion in this close case not on the basis that we agree with the 

Commissioner’s decision, but rather, because the decision is supported by substantial evidence 

and was made pursuant to the prescribed legal standards—observation of the treating physician 

rule and good reasons requirement, credibility findings grounded in objective evidence and 

sufficient for subsequent review, and consideration of the entire record. Reasonable minds could 

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agree that the record evidence supports the determination that Gibbens, though impaired, retains 

the residual functional capacity to perform work. Therefore, we AFFIRM the judgment of the 

district court in favor of the Commissioner of Social Security.

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