George E. Mellon appeals from a judgment of the district court 1 affirming a decision of the Secretary of Health and Human Services denying disability insurance benefits. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand this case.
At the time of the April 1981 administrative hearing, Mellon was forty years old, functionally illiterate, and had work experience as a laborer in the construction industry. He last worked in June of 1979. Mellon testified that he was unable to work because of constant pain. He stated he did not take prescribed pain medication but instead drank two quarts of bourbon a week. He stated, however, that he was able to lift a 50-pound bag of chicken feed, *1383 but that this activity caused pain and fatigue.
Medical evidence indicates that Mellon was hospitalized in March and May of 1978 for back pain and was diagnosed as having acute back strain with a possible disc injury. In August 1980, Mellon was examined by a consulting physician, who diagnosed chronic low back strain, subjective right leg pain and numbness, chest pain, probable cigarette bronchitis, alcoholism, a chronic hearing defect in the left ear, and hypertension.
In March 1981, Dr. Douglas Stevens, a clinical psychologist, examined appellant. After psychological and intelligence testing, Dr. Stevens found Mellon to be a functional illiterate suffering from the “double barreled” problem of depression and hysteria. Dr. Stevens explained that Mellon had a “strong tendency to convert any stress or pressure to hysteriod types of complaints and to unconsciously increase the level of perceived discomfort and disability.” Dr. Stevens suggested that Mellon’s condition might improve if he were able to attend a residential treatment center. However, Dr. Stevens noted that Mellon could not afford such treatment and that public assistance was unavailable.
The AU denied benefits, finding that Mellon’s subjective complaints of pain were not credible and that his psychological impairment was remediable and did not significantly affect his residual functional capacity for medium work. Accordingly, the AU relied on the Medical-Vocational Guidelines to direct a finding of no disability.
In this case, the AU committed several errors that warrant a remand. First, the AU improperly discounted Mellon’s complaints of pain. The AU erroneously relied on Mellon’s testimony that he could lift a 50-pound sack of chicken feed. Although Mellon testified that he could lift the bag, he also stated that to do so caused him such pain that he had to lie down. Considered with Dr. Stevens’ observation that Mellon overestimated his abilities, this testimony is insufficient to show that Mellon could perform medium work activities.
See Carpenter v. Heckler,
Second, there is no evidence in the record to suggest that Mellon’s psychological impairment is remediable. Dr. Stevens’ report suggested that a stay at a residential treatment center might offer a chance of success, but noted that Mellon could not afford such treatment.
See Allred v. Heckler,
Third, the AU erred in ignoring the evidence of Mellon’s alcoholism and how it relates to his functional abilities.
See Orr v. Heckler,
In addition, on remand we direct the Secretary to consider 20 C.F.R. § 416.936 (1983), which provides that “if the Secretary determines that a supplemental security income (SSI) claimant is an alcoholic, the claimant must take appropriate treatment for [the] condition as a[n] alcoholic at an approved institution or facility, when the treatment is available. [The claimant is] not expected to pay for this treatment * * In
Adams v. Weinberger,
Last, because of the presence of nonexertional impairments of depression, hysteria, pain, fatigue, and alcoholism, the AU erred in relying on the Medical-Vocational Guidelines.
See Tucker v. Schweiker,
Accordingly, this case is reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Honorable H. Franklin Waters, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas.
