We reverse the judgment below and remand to the Secretary for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Once again we are compelled to reverse the Secretary’s determination that a claimant is not “disabled” within the meaning of 42 U.S.C. § 423(d)(1). Although the Secretary’s decision will be affirmed when it is supported by “substantial evidence,”
id.
§ 405(g);
Richardson v. Perales,
Mrs. Claire Eiden left her position as a legal stenographer in 1970, and sought disability benefits for the period ending June 30, 1975, the date upon which her insurance ended. The only witness to appear before the administrative law judge (ALJ), Mrs. Eiden testified that she was often unable to move her fingers or knees, that she could not push or pull with her hands, and that she had difficulty sitting for extended periods. Moreover, she introduced a report by the physician who had treated her since 1970. Dr. Leo Parnés, an osteopath, unequivocally diagnosed Mrs. Eiden as suffering from “severe hypertrophic arthritis of the spine and extremities, with limitation of motion, spasms and pain, peripheral vascular disease with varicose veins and edema and decreased pulsations, weakness.” This diagnosis was based, according to Dr. Parnés, on EKG tracing and X-ray reports. In a subsequent letter to the Secretary, Dr. Parnés made clear his view that Mrs. Eiden had been “completely disabled since 1970.”
The ALJ, in turn, ordered a medical examination of Mrs. Eiden by Dr. Fisher. Al *65 though Dr. Fisher found no evidence of varicosities and normal pulsations, he reported that plaintiff suffered from coronary insufficiency. He concluded that she could sit, stand, or walk only one hour each day, and that she could engage in no lifting, carrying or fine manipulation. Moreover, tests conducted by Dr. King, at the request of Dr. Fisher, found “mild to moderate enlargement of the heart, and mild pulmonary vascular congestion.”
After reviewing this evidence, the ALJ found that the “medical evidence . is insufficient to demonstrate any . impairments of sufficient severity which existed on or before June 30, 1975.” He relied on the fact that (1) Dr. Parnés provided no objective test results; (2) Mrs. Eiden had never been hospitalized; and (3) she was not examined by a physician (as distinguished from an osteopath) until he ordered an examination. Thus, he concluded that plaintiff’s evidence left the “degree of impairment ... to pure conjecture, surmise, and speculation,” and that she could “perform her regular work as a legal stenographer.” Both Magistrate Caden and Judge Neaher decided that this conclusion was supported by substantial evidence.
Our decisions in
Alvarado, Bastien,
and
Gold
compel us to reach a different conclusion. The only evidence before the Secretary detailed a number of medical findings, including Dr. Parnes’s determination that Mrs. Eiden was unable to work in 1970. Indeed, the examination conducted by the physician designated by the ALJ indicated that plaintiff could sit, stand, or walk only one hour each day, and that she could engage in no lifting, carrying, or fine manipulation. The AU’s conclusion, therefore, that Mrs. Eiden could have worked as a legal stenographer is mystifying. In the face of the testimony verifying Mrs. Eiden’s disability, the fact that no pre-1975 medical records were introduced is of no significance. There was a complete absence of contrary medical proof to the affirmative evidence of disability: “ ‘evidence bearing upon an applicant’s condition subsequent to the date [of eligibility] is pertinent evidence in that it may disclose the severity and continuity of impairments existing before.’ ”
Gold v. Secretary of HEW,
In addition, the ALJ did not fulfill his affirmative obligation to assist this
pro se
claimant in developing her case.
Gold, supra,
