Linda Barrett appeals from the district court’s affirmance of the denial by an administrative law judge of her application for social security disability benefits. Barrett, who was 39 years old at the time of her hearing before the administrative law judge and has a high school education, is extremely obese, weighing more than 300 pounds even though she is only 5 feet 1 inch tall. She also has a severe hearing loss in both ears, osteoarthritis in both knees, and numbness and pain in an arm and hand that may be due to carpal tunnel syndrome, although the administrative law judge did not think this a severe impairment; for that matter, he dismissed the significance of Barrett’s arthritic knees on the ground that her arthritis was “not so significant as to warrant surgery and is mainly exacerbated by her weight.” He rejected a report by a physical therapist who had examined Barrett and had concluded that she was incapable of full-time work; the administrative law judge thought that Barrett had exaggerated her condition to the therapist. He determined that although Barrett cannot return to her previous work, which was straightening the tails of mink pelts on a mink ranch— apparently a strenuous job — she can do a wide range of other “light” work (not to be confused with sedentary work, see 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1567(a), (b)), including factory work, provided she doesn’t have to stand for more than two hours at a time or *1067 sit for more than six hours at a time or lift more than 20 pounds frequently. The two-hour limitation on consecutive standing that the administrative law judge imposed was not based, directly anyway, on medical evidence. The only physician who specified limitations had advised that Barrett could stand for up to six hours at a time, but he had not known about the problem with her knees.
A vocational expert, whose function in a social security disability hearing is to determine which jobs the applicant for disability benefits can do and how many such jobs exist in the applicant’s state, 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1566(b), (e);
Donahue v. Barnhart,
A vocational expert can testify to the number of light jobs in Wisconsin, since “light” work is a defined term. But here he was asked to determine the number of jobs in a subclass of light work, namely the jobs that don’t require standing for more than two hours at a stretch, or normal hearing. For him to offer the number 24,500 with no indication of how he adjusted the numbers in the dictionary to reflect Barrett’s diminished capacity leaves us in the dark about the actual basis of his testimony, as in
Ragsdale v. Shalala,
First, to give no weight at all to the physical therapist’s report because Barrett had exaggerated her condition to the therapist (and we accept the administrative law judge’s finding on that score, a well-nigh unreviewable determination of credibility) was arbitrary, since the therapist based her evaluation on physical tests and observation, not just on what Barrett told her. Although Barrett is wrong to argue that a physical therapist’s report should be given controlling weight, such reports are entitled to consideration.
Lauer v. Apfel,
Then there is the administrative law judge’s handling of Barrett’s arthritis. The fact that her arthritis is exacerbated by her obesity does not make the arthritis a less serious condition, but on the contrary a more serious one. But by treating obesity as an aggravating factor, the administrative law judge may have been hinting that Barrett should lose weight, that obesity is like refusing to wear glasses or a hearing aid — essentially a self-inflicted disability that does not entitle one to benefits or boost one’s entitlement by aggravating another medical condition. E.g., 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1530(a), (b);
Shramek v. Apfel,
Maybe the administrative law judge thought that since he had already ruled that Barrett’s obesity was a severe impairment of her ability to work, though not totally disabling in itself (that is, not a “listed” impairment, in social security disability lingo), conditions caused or aggravated by obesity were irrelevant. That of course would be wrong. The problem is that we don’t know what he thought. And in particular (this is the third serious flaw in his analysis) we do not know on what basis he decided that Barrett can stand for two hours at a time. No physician said that. A great many people who are not grossly obese and do not have arthritic knees find it distinctly uncomfortable to stand for two hours at a time. To suppose that Barrett could do so day after day on a factory floor borders on the fantastic, but in any event has no evidentiary basis that we can find.
And finally and all too characteristically, the administrative law judge failed to consider the applicant’s medical situation as a whole, as he is required to do. E.g., 20 C.F.R. § 404.1523;
Golembiewski v. Barnhart,
The cumulative effect of the administrative law judge’s errors and omissions was to fail to build a rational bridge from the evidence to the finding that Barrett was not totally disabled. E.g.,
Lopez ex rel. Lopez v. Barnhart,
ReveRSed And Remanded.
