This social security ease has a lengthy procedural history. When June Ford applied for social security disability benefits, an administrative law judge denied her claim following a hearing and the Appeals Council denied review. While Ms. Ford’s subsequent appeal was pending in federal district court, the parties agreed to a remand to the Social Security Adminis
We review the district court’s decision
de novo
to determine whether the Commissioner’s denial of benefits complies with the relevant legal requirements and is supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole.
See Pettit v. Apfel,
As one prerequisite to obtaining benefits, a claimant must show that he or she has a severe medically determinable impairment. 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4)(ii). Here, the ALJ determined that Ms. Ford’s degenerative disc disease and muscle spasms were severe impairments as that term is used in the regulations. He also concluded that her depression and carpal-tunnel-syndrome symptoms were non-severe impairments. After determining that Ms. Ford’s impairments did not meet any of social security’s list of circumstances under which disability is presumed,
see
20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4)(iii), the ALJ was required to determine her residual functional capacity (RFC),
ie.,
the most that she was capable of doing despite the combined effects of both her severe and non-severe medically determinable impairments, 20 C.F.R. § 404.1545(a);
see Casey v. Astrue,
When determining Ms. Ford’s RFC, the ALJ was required to consider her own description of her pain and limitations.
Masterson v. Barnhart,
There is not much medical evidence in the record that corroborates the specifics of Ms. Ford’s account, but there is evidence from Ms. Ford, administrative personnel, and examining and consulting doctors that indicates that she took prescription pain medication (Ultram) and a muscle relaxer (Soma) during the relevant period. She also provided written statements from witnesses regarding her condition: Her son-in-law wrote that in the last ten to fifteen years, she had “extremely bad problems with her back.” When it “flares up,” he said, “she is almost completely immobilized and on several occasions I have had to physically
Ms. Ford also stated that she had shoulder and neck pain, as well as pain in her hands, wrists, and arms that had been diagnosed as carpal tunnel syndrome, and that she suffered from thyroid disease and depression. She acknowledged that her thyroid disease was correctable with medication. She indicated that she had been taking a prescription antidepressant (Prozac) since her first husband died in a car accident eight years earlier and that her depression worsened when her pain increased.
The ALJ did not fully credit Ms. Ford’s complaints of pain and she challenges this determination as her sole issue on appeal. Our frequently-cited opinion in
Polaski v. Heckler,
Here the ALJ gave reasons for his credibility determination, and there is substantial evidence in the record tending to support the ALJ’s ultimate credibility finding. First, although not a clear discrepancy, we think that the ALJ was entitled to give some weight to evidence that Ms. Ford quit her bank job voluntarily — and not because of any impairment — shortly before her husband was transferred to another location, and that she did not apply for another job after moving because she said that she “knew” that an employer would not keep her once her debilitating muscle spasms began. The ALJ also relied on Ms. Ford’s statement that she sometimes went for months without having a severe muscle spasm, and he refers to medical reports for his conclusion that her subjective complaints were not supported by the medical records. Though the ALJ may not rely solely on the lack of objective medical evidence, such evidence is one “factor” that he may consider,
Polaski,
But we agree with Ms. Ford that some of the statements that the ALJ relied on to show that the accounts that she gave of her difficulties were inconsistent do not, in fact, contradict each other. For example,
With respect to the ALJ’s reliance on medical records, moreover, we question his statement that Dr. Scott Hall, an examining physician, found that Ms. Ford had “only minimal limitations in some range of motion testing.” We cannot tell what areas of the body the ALJ is referring to, and he fails to mention that Dr. Hall reported, inter alia, that Ms. Ford’s range of motion was significantly limited in her hips and wrists, findings that supported her assertions that she had difficulty in bending and straightening and in using her hands.
After careful consideration of the record in this case, we cannot say that it weighs so heavily against Ms. Ford’s credibility that the ALJ would necessarily have disbelieved her absent the erroneous inferences that he drew from the record. We therefore conclude that the better course is to allow the ALJ to reconsider Ms. Ford’s application based on a proper consideration of the evidence. Accordingly, we reverse and remand the case to the district court for remand to the Social Security Administration for reconsideration of Ms. Ford’s application.
Cf. Dewey v. Astrue,
Notes
. Michael J. Astrue has been appointed to serve as Commissioner of the Social Security Administration and is substituted as appellee pursuant to Fed. R.App. P. 43(c)(2).
