The plaintiff challenges the Social Security Administration’s denial (upheld by the district court) of disability benefits. She claims to be disabled by virtue of having the psychiatric illness that is nowadays called “bipolar disorder”; the older and more descriptive term is manic-depressive illness. A person suffering from the disorder has violent mood swings, the extremes of which are mania — a state of high excitement in which he loses contact with reality and exhibits bizarre behavior — and clinical depression, in which he has great difficulty sleeping or concentrating, has suicidal thoughts and may actually attempt suicide. The condition, which varies in its severity, see American Psychiatric Ass’n,
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
297-98 (4th ed.2000), is treatable by antipsychotic drugs and other medications. Sophia Frangоu, “Advancing the Pharmacological Treatment of Bipolar Depression,” 11
Advances in Psych. Treatment
28, 81-38 (2005). But many patients do not respond well to treatment, or have frequent relapses. See, e.g., Kaаn Kora et al., “Predictive Factors for Time to Remission and Recurrence in Patients Treated for Acute Mania: Health Outcomes of Manic Episodes (HOME) Study,” 10
J. Clin. Psychiatry
114 (2008); Robert G. Bota, “Theraрeutic Dilemmas in Treatment-Resistant Bipolar Patients,” 101
S. Medical J.
584 (2008). “For many patients, the prognosis of bipolar disorder is not good, as the disorder is associated with frequent relapses and rеcurrences.” Edward Watkins, “Combining Cognitive Therapy with Medication in Bipolar Disorder,” 9
Advances in Psych. Treatment
110 (2003); see also
Kangail v. Barnhart,
For three years (less a month) the plaintiff was regularly seen by a psychiatrist named Elizabeth Caspary and a psychologist named Robert Chucka. Both diagnosed her as bipolar. Though prescribed a variety of antipsychotic drugs, she was hospitalized several times with hallucinations, rаcing thoughts, thoughts of suicide, and other symptoms of bipolar disorder. As a result of the imperfect control of her disorder, both Caspary and Chucka opined that she could not hold dоwn a full-time job. And she testified that she had been fired from her job as a medical technician because, although she takes the drugs prescribed for her faithfully (many manic depressives do not, e.g., Gary E. Simon et al., Long-Term Effectiveness and Cost of a Systematic Care Program for Bipolar Disorder, 63 Gen. Psych. 500 (2006)), her condition prevented her from working.
A consultant who has a Ph.D. in an unspecified field examined the plaintiffs medical records and concluded that although she indeed has bipolar disorder, it only moderately limits her ability to work. A vocational expert testified that, assuming the moderate limitation, there were plenty of jobs she could fill.
*608
The administrative law judge concluded that the plaintiff can hold down a full-time job. But he ignored the “treating physician” rule, 20 C.F.R. § 404.1527(d)(2), which, as we explainеd in
Hofslien v. Barnhart,
There was evidence — the report of the nonexamining consultant — that contradicted the reports of the treating physicians. (The psychologist, Dr. Chucka, is deemed a “physician” in the sense of a medical expert with relevant expertise who treats the applicant, 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1513(a), 404.1527(a)(2);
Bowen v. Commissioner of Social Security,
Many of the reasons offered by the administrative law judge for disсounting the evidence of Drs. Caspary and Chucka suggest a lack of acquaintance with bipolar disorder. For example, the judge noted that the plaintiff dresses appropriately, shops for food, prepares meals and performs other household chores, is an “active participator [sic ] in group therapy,” is “independent in her personal hygiene,” and takes care of her 13-year-old son. This is just to say that the plaintiff is not a raving maniac who needs to be locked up. She is heavily medicated, and this enables hеr to cope with the challenges of daily living, and would doubtless enable her to work on some days. But the administrative law judge disregarded uncontradicted evidence that the plaintiffs sоn cooks most meals, washes the dishes, does the laundry, and helps with the grocery shopping. And Caspary and Chucka, having treated the *609 plaintiff continuously for three years, have cоncluded that she cannot hold down a full-time job.
What seems to have made the biggest impression on the administrative law judge, but suggests a lack of understanding of bipolar disorder, was that Dr. Cas-рary’s treatment notes, which back up the report in which she concludes that the plaintiff cannot work full time, contain a number of hopeful remarks. They are either remarks the plaintiff made to Cas-pary during office visits or Caspary’s independent observations — the plaintiffs memory was “ok,” her sleep fair, she was doing “fairly well,” her “reported level of function was found to have improved,” she had “a brighter affect and increased energy,” she “was doing quite well.” On the basis of such remarks the administrative law judge concluded: “little weight is given the assеssment of Dr. Caspary.”
A person who has a chronic disease, whether physical or psychiatric, and is under continuous treatment for it with heavy drugs, is likely to have better days and worse days; that is true of the plaintiff in this case. Suppose that half the time she is well enough that she could work, and half the time she is not. Then she could not hold down a full-time job. E.g.,
Watson v. Barnhart,
We are mindful of the distinction between a plаintiffs disabilities, a subject that medical experts know best, and the existence of jobs for someone with those disabilities. Social Security is not an unemployment program; if the plaintiff сan do the tasks required by an employer, whatever they may be, the fact that employers prefer other people, and so won’t hire her, does not entitle her to benefits. So when Caspary and Chucka opined that the plaintiff could not hold down a full-time job, they were not just answering a medical question; they were implicitly commenting on supply and demаnd. But the medical (disability) question and the economic (vocational) question are not readily separable. This is implicit in the concept of listed impairments — medical conditions that are deemed totally disabling without inquiry into labor-market conditions. 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4)(iii); 20 C.F.R. pt. 404, subpt. P;
Barnett v. Barnhart,
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded to the Social Security Administration.
