Joann Reed appeals from the district court’s order affirming the final decision of the Commissioner of Social Security, which denied her applications for disability insur-
I.
Reed was born on September 2, 1959. Though she did not attend school beyond the tenth grade, she has obtained her General Education Diploma. R.eed has been diagnosed with an anxiety-related disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, migraine headaches, and degenerative disc disease of the lumbar spine. At the hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), Reed testified that she last worked in December of 1994 or thereabouts and had to quit because of her back. “I couldn’t handle the sitting,” she stated. In 1997, one of her husband’s friends raped and beat Reed and then abandoned her in a field. Since the attack, Reed has suffered from frequent anxiety attacks and nightmares and has been prescribed medications for depression, anxiety, and insomnia. Reed’s treating physician, a psychiatrist by the name of Dr. Antonio Dimalanta, provided a Medical Source Statement (MSS) indicating that Reed was markedly limited in her ability to understand and remember detailed instructions, maintain attention and concentration for extended periods, and travel in unfamiliar places or use public transportation. He further indicated that she was extremely limited in her ability to complete a normal workday and workweek without interruptions from psychologically based symptoms.
Reed testified that she was evicted" from her apartment for not paying rent and had moved in with her mother-in-law. Her allocation of $248 in food stamps was reduced to $10 when her husband took a job as a cashier. She further stated that she does not have a driver’s license and that she relies on friends or taxis for transportation. Reed described herself as capable of preparing her own meals, feeding two dogs, and doing “a little bit of crafts,” including stamping, making cards, and ’some beadwork. She does crafts to “keep busy,” but can stay with them for only about an hour before losing focus and getting frustrated. Reed described her other activities and capabilities as follows: Though she -does the laundry, she cannot carry the basket; she sometimes has difficulty using her hands for gripping and holding things, and sometimes her appendages go numb; she cannot vacuum the floor or clean the bathtub or shower, but considers herself “probably” able to take out the trash; she can make the bed, but cannot change the sheets. Reed does not belong to any club, organization, or church.
Read stated that she can lift five to ten pounds, sit for twenty minutes, stand for ten to fifteen minutes, and walk one block. Harold Davidson, the vocational expert, identified Reed’s past work to include stints as a sales attendant, cashier, assembler, packager and nurse’s aid, in addition to her last job as a microfilmer. The ALJ asked Davidson whether an individual 'of the same age, education, and work history as Reed could perform Reed’s- past work, assuming an ability to do the following: lift ten pounds frequently and twenty pounds occasionally; stand or walk six hours of a day and sit six -hours a day with normal breaks; and occasionally-stoop. The ALJ further asked Davidson to rule out stressful environments, such as deadlines and fast-paced activity, and to assume that the person could not perform work that required “sustained' attention- to detail.” Davidson responded that such a person could not perform Reed’s past relevant work, but that they could work as a hand packager or assembly worker. Davidson went on to specify that for unskilled hand packagers able- to engage in light activity, 8,000 jobs could be found in Missouri, and
The ALJ then asked Davidson whether such a person could perform these jobs if that person was markedly limited in the ways described by Dr. Dimalanta. Davi-son answered that such a person would be incapable of performing the packaging and assembly work discussed. Davidson commented that the extreme limitation noted in Reed’s “ability to complete a normal workday and workweek without interruptions from psychologically based symptoms and to perform at a consistent pace without an unreasonable number and length of rest periods,” Ex. 13F, implicated the qualities of “sustained concentration and persistence which [are] heavily weighted in terms of the average workers.” “And with that limitation,” Davidson concluded, “that would essentially prevent a person from sustaining [the] work that I gave you.”
Following the ALJ’s determination that Reed was not disabled, the Appeals Council denied review of the ALJ’s decision. As set forth above, Reed now appeals from the district court’s affirmance of the Commissioner’s decision denying Reed’s claim for benefits.
II.
We review
de novo
a district court decision affirming a denial of social security benefits.
Strongson v. Barnhart,
Reed first asserts that the ALJ failed to give controlling weight to the opinion of her treating psychiatrist, Dr. Dimalanta, thereby contradicting the rules established in SSR 96-2p and 20 C.F.R. § 404.1527. Second, Reed claims that the ALJ did not explain the evidence he relied upon in developing her Mental Residual Functional Capacity (“MRFC”) in violation of SSR 85-16.
Reed contends that the ALJ “provided no rationale for disregarding” Dr. Dimalanta’s opinion. “[A] treating physician’s opinion is given ‘controlling weight’ if it ‘is well-supported by medically acceptable clinical and laboratory diagnostic techniques and is not inconsistent with the other substantial evidence.’ ”
Dolph v. Barnhart,
The ALJ noted several grounds for his conclusory rejection of the MSS completed by Dr. Dimalanta. The ALJ first stated that he “considers such evaluation by ‘box’ category’ [sic] to be déficient.” The relevant question is not whether the ALJ, on a personal level, considers this method of evaluation deficient, but rather whether there exists a principled reason to reject it. An MSS is a checklist evaluation in which the responding physician ranks the patient’s abilities, and is considered a source of “objective medical evidence.”
Burress,
Second, the ALJ disregarded Dr. Dimalanta’s opinion on grounds of inconsistency.
“[Dr. Dimalanta’s]' choices are not consistent, since he indicates claimant is ‘not significantly’ limited in the ability to remember locations'and work-like procedures, or in the ability to understand and remember very short and simple •instructions, or in the ability to carry out very short and simple instructions, but is ‘markedly’ limited in the ability to maintain attention and concentration for extended periods.”
The regulations require that the ALJ “always give good reasons” for the weight afforded to a treating physician’s evaluation. 20 C.F.R. § 404.1527(d)(2); Dolph,
Finalthe ALJ faulted Dr. Dima-lanta’s basis of knowledge for the MSS; concluding that “[Dr. Dimalanta’s] records fail to provide any explanation for the choices, and, in fact, reveal very little in
In Dolph, we upheld an ALJ’s decision to accord less weight to the opinion of a treating physician who had treated the claimant for kidney disease where the matter at issue pertained to the claimant’s cervical condition. See id. There, the ALJ noted that the treating physician had “not treated the claimant for her neck and arm disorders, he ha[d] not made any clinical findings concerning those impairments, and his specialty is nephrology.” Id. at 879. In light of this, it was proper for the ALJ to rely principally upon the opinions of other physicians who had seen the claimant and whose areas of expertise coincided with the condition at issue. See id. These are indeed “good reasons,” and they stand in marked contrast to those relied upon by the ALJ in his explanation for discounting Dr. Dimalanta’s opinion.
III.
We turn then to the question whether the ALJ failed to explain the evidence he relied upon in developing Reed’s MRFC in violation of SSR 85-16. “The ALJ must determine a claimant’s RFC based on all of the relevant evidence.”
Fredrickson v. Barnhart,
After mentioning several of Reed’s activities, such as fixing meals, watching movies, checking the mail, and doing laundry, the ALJ noted that Reed’s “ability to perform them to any degree is inconsistent with her allegations of constant, debilitating symptoms.” Four paragraphs earlier,
Following his truncated discussion of Reed’s activities, the ALJ concluded as follows: “Considering these factors, the undersigned does not find the record to be supportive of the claimant’s allegations that her symptomatology would preclude her from performing any work.” It is necessary from time to time to “remind the Secretary that to And a claimant has the residual functional capacity to perform a certain type of work, the claimant must have the ability to perform the requisite acts day in and day out, in the sometimes competitive and stressful conditions in which real people work in the real world.”
Thomas,
Furthermore, we must guard against giving undue evidentiary weight to a claimant’s ability to carry out the activities incident to day-to-day living when evaluating the claimant’s ability to perform full-time work. The ALJ not only considered the effects of Reed’s activities on her “allegations of constant, debilitating symptoms,” but on her “allegations that her symptoma-tology would preclude her from performing any work” as well. Although “[a]cts which are inconsistent with a claimant’s assertion of disability reflect negatively upon that claimant’s credibility,”
Johnson v. Apfel,
All things considered, then, we conclude that the judgment must be reversed and the case remanded to the district court with directions that the case be remanded to the Commissioner for further proceedings consistent with the views set forth in this opinion.
It is so ordered.'
