Betty Varney appeals from the district court’s judgment affirming the decision of the Secretary of Health and Human Services to deny her application for Social Security disability benefits. We reverse the district court’s decision and remand Varney’s case for further proceedings.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
The claimant, Betty Varney, was born in 1932. She has a high school equivalency degree and worked at a variety of unskilled and semi-skilled jobs until December 1981, when she suffered a heart attack. She underwent triple coronary bypass surgery in February 1982, and shortly afterward sustained a second heart attack. In April 1982, her treating cardiologist indiсated that Varney was totally and permanently disabled as a result of her heart condition. In August 1983, a neurologist who examined Varney on several occasions agreed that she was “totally disabled because of the heart problem.”
Varney was in an automobile accident in July 1982 and sustained injuries to her back and neck. Her treating orthopedic specialists subsequently diagnosed her as suffering from chronic neck and lower back strain. Her other complaints include hypertension, frequent headaches, and chronic bronchitis. Varney has not worked since December 1981.
Varney applied for Social Security disability benefits in May 1983, claiming a disability onset date of December 81,1981. 1 Her application was denied initially and on reconsideration. Varney then requested a hearing, which was held before an Administrative Law Judge (“AU”) on October 15, 1984. At the hearing, Varney testified that she experienced constant lower back pain and constant headaches. 2 She stated that thirty to forty minutes of light housework would bring on extreme fatigue and chest pains, and that on at least four to five days every month she was too tired to leave her house. She also testified that her legs became very painful after walking two or three blocks; that she could neither sit nor stand for extended periods without becoming uncomfortable and that she was not comfortable at all sitting in a straight chair; and that any lifting would cause chest pains. 3 Varney further testified that she was taking a range of medications that caused side effects ranging from fatigue to nausea, swollen ankles, diarrhea, and constipation.
Based on the medical evidence, the AU found that Varney suffered from cardiac artery disease, aftereffects of two myocardial infarctions and cardiac bypass surgery, hypertension, chronic cerviсal and lumbar strain, and headaches; he also determined that she could not perform her past relevant work. However, he found that Var-ney could perform the full range of sedentary work and that the skills required for her previous jobs were transferable to available jobs that she remained capable of performing. Applying Rule 201.15 of the Medical Vocational Guidelines, 20 C.F.R. Pt. 404, Subpt. P, App. 2 (1987) (the “grids”), the AU concluded that Varney was not disabled. In drawing this conclusion, the AU found that Varney’s pain *583 testimony was “exaggerated over what is corroborated by the weight of the objective medical evidence” and was not credible. He also found that her treating physicians’ opinions that Varney was completely disabled were contradicted by the medical evidence and by the evidence concerning economic and social factors.
Varney appealed the denial of benеfits to the district court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) (1982); the court granted summary judgment for the Secretary. Varney timely appeals under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) (1982).
DISCUSSION
I. Adequacy of Transcript
Varney contends first that her case should be remanded for another hearing because the record is not adequate for review. Specifically, she points out that the first 260 units of the taрe of the October 15, 1984, hearing could not be transcribed at all and that there are 26 passages in the transcript marked “inaudible.” The district court relied on
McGlone v. Heckler,
Wе need not decide which of these two standards is the more appropriate because under either one, Varney’s argument fails. Varney admits that she was unable to make the showing required under
McGlone.
Moreover, we find this record sufficient to allow fair and thorough review. The portion of the hearing that is missing frоm the transcript is the first part of Varney’s testimony; the transcribed portion of the hearing picks up Varney’s testimony describing her medical history at the point where she was hospitalized following her first heart attack. Varney's testimony as to her subjective symptoms and limitations, which follows her narration of her mеdical history, appears to be complete. The “inaudible” passages in the later parts of the transcript “appear very small.... Although distracting, the gaps [do] not interfere with comprehension of the testimony to an extent that would hinder fair review.”
Ward,
II. Subjective Pain Testimony
Varney argues next that the Secretary erred in failing to give reasons for finding Varney’s pain testimony not credible, and that this error requires reversal. Varney is correct.
Varney bears the burden of proving that she is disabled; she must show “that a medically determinable physical or mental impairment prevents [her] from engaging in substantial gainful activity and that the impairment is expected to result in death or to last for a continuous period of at least 12 months.”
Gamer v. Secretary of Health and Human Services,
Pain can impose significant limitations on an individual’s ability to engage in gainful activity. For this reason, we have consistently treated subjective pain testimony as an important factor in the disability determination proсess.
Cotton v. Bowen,
In some cases, a claimant may testify that he or she experiences pain that is associated with a medical impairment, but that the pain is greater than the impairment would normally be expected to produce. We have referred to such testimony аs “excess pain testimony” — excess pain being “pain that is unsupported by objective medical findings.”
Cotton,
The parameters of this specific finding requirement are not entirely clear. In some cases, we have upheld the Secretary’s denial of benefits on the ground that the ALJ’s findings were sufficiently specific, without detailing what those findings were.
See, e.g., Young v. Heckler,
That is precisely what happened in Varney’s case. The AU’s finding as to Varney’s pain testimony consists in its entirety of the following sentence: “The claimant’s reports of subjective symptoms and limitations are exaggerated over what is corroborated by the weight of the objective medical evidence, and to this extent, her reports are not credible.” Clearly, Varney suffers from several impairments — including heart disease and chronic neck and back strain — that can be expected to produce pain. Yet the AU gives no reason for disregarding Varney’s pain testimony, other than the assertion that her subjective complaints are disproportionate to the medical evidence; nor does he isolate particular complaints of pain and discuss the evidence suggesting that those complaints are not credible. In this circuit, these omissions are improper as a matter of law; they require that we reverse the AU's decision and remand for further proceedings. The AU must either accept Varney’s testimony or make specific findings rejecting it. Any specific findings must, of course, be supported by the record and will be subject to further review by the courts.
Gamer,
Several conclusions follow from our finding that the AU did not proрerly consider Varney’s subjective complaints.
See Cotton,
Second, in finding that Varney has skills she can apply to jobs which exist in significant numbers in the national economy, the AU relied on an answer of a vocational expert to a hypothetical question posed by the AU. The question envisioned a claimant of Vаrney’s age, education, and job skills who was “limited to sedentary exertion.” Yet we have held that a hypothetical must set forth
all
of a claimant’s impairments — specifically including pain — in order for the vocational expert’s testimony to have any value.
Gallant v. Heckler,
Third, we have noted that the grids “describe only ‘major functional and vocational patterns.’ ”
Gallant v. Heckler,
III. Side Effects of Medications
Varney testified that she takes several different kinds of medication, primarily for her heart cоndition and high blood pressure. As already noted, she testified that she experiences fairly severe side effects from those medications. She indicated that she reported those side effects to two of her doctors, and they told her that she needed the medications and that the side effects were unavoidable.
The AU noted that Varney takes various medications and acknowledged her testimony as to their side effects. He did not, however, make any findings with regard to the side effects; he did not ask the medical expert who testified at the hearing about the side effects that could reasоnably be expected from Varney’s medications; he did not consider the impact of the side effects on Varney’s ability to work, or include them as a limitation in his hypothetical question to the vocational expert; and he gave no reason — beyond the general finding discrediting Varney’s “reports of subjective symptoms and limitations” — for disregarding Varney’s testimony on this issue.
Like pain, the side effects of medications can have a significant impact on an individual’s ability to work and should figure in the disability determination process.
Cf Howard,
CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment and remand the case with directions to remand to the Secretary for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Varney had applied for disability benefits in April 1982 and was turned down; she did not appeal that denial. The government apparently does not contend that Varney’s previous denial should affect the outcome of this appeal.
. Varney wears a back brace to provide some relief from her pain, and testified that she has also used a transcutaneous nerve stimulator.
.The record also indicates that Varney complained of persistent pain to her treating cardiologist and orthopedic specialists on several occasions.
