Cindy Myers filed an application for disability benefits under Title II of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 401^03. After a hearing, an ALJ denied her claim, and the district court subsequently affirmed the decision. For the following reasons, we reverse the decision of the district court and remand for further proсeedings consistent with this opinion.
I. Facts and Procedure
Cindy Myers worked as a stagehand when she injured her back in January of 1986. Prior to that job, she had worked as a clerk and as a secretary. She was treated by Dr. Mark Hontas, an orthopedic professor, for back pain; he diagnosed back strain and recommended physical therapy. Myers’s back pain increased after she was in a car accident in September of 1986. In 1988, Dr. Ray Haddad, chairman of orthopedic surgery at Tulane Medical Center Hospital and Clinic, treated Myers and diagnosed L6-S1 rаdiculopathy (a disease of the nerve roots in the back) and lytic lesion in the left hip. He recommended that she lose weight, and if the pain did not subside, he recommended surgery, which Myers refused. A February 1988 MRI revealed a ruptured disc, and Dr. Haddad again suggested surgery.
On Septеmber 28, 1988, Dr. Frank Kriz, an orthopedist, diagnosed low back strain and a bulging, but not ruptured, disc. He discharged Myers on December 6, 1988, giving her a five-percent disability rate and recommending that she see a psychiatrist, from whom she received antidepressants. Myers worked as a receptionist for three-month intervals in 1989 and 1990. On June 30, 1990, Myers, then thirty-three years old, was last insured for disability benefits.
In February of 1993, following another car accident, Myers saw Dr. William Johnston, and a second MRI showed degenerative disc disease. Dr. Johnston diagnosed chronic pain syndrome and rеferred Myers to a physical medicine specialist, who diagnosed sacroiliac dysfunction (an unlevel pelvis from overstretched ligaments). In 1994, Myers was treated by Dr. Vanda Davidson, an orthopedist. Using the results from Drs. Hontas, Haddad, and Johnston, Dr. Davidson concluded Myers could lift ten pounds occasionally, lift one pound frequently, stand two hours out of the day for ten minutes at a time, and sit four hours out of the day for thirty minutes at a time. Her ability to reach and to push and pull would be affected.
Myers filed an application for disability benefits on May 26, 1994. After she was denied benefits, she was granted a hearing before an ALJ. Dr. Rufus Craig, an internist, was called as a medical expert (ME) by the ALJ. Without examining Myers and based only on a review of her medical records, Dr. Craig testified that Myers could not squat, stoop, or bend, but could sit six hours of eight, stand аnd walk two hours of eight, and occasionally lift ten pounds. Her “emotional overlay” would also limit her work. A vocational expert (VE) also testified. The VE said there were no jobs for claimants Myers’s age with her education and experience who could sit for up to six hours a day, stand and walk for two hours, lift up to ten pounds, but who could not squat, stoop, bend, or kneel. However, he believed that a claimant who could not squat or crawl but who could stoop and bend in limited amounts and occasionally kneel could perform sedentary work. Responding to a hypothetical in which a person could sit for only thirty minutes at a time, the VE testified that jobs would be very limited, and when asked about a person who could stand for only ten minutes at a time and who could sit for only thirty minutes at a
The ALJ found that Myers was not disabled and that although she was unable to return to her prior work on June 30, 1990 (the date when her insured status expired), she could make аn adjustment to sedentary work. He concluded that Myers had a severe impairment, but that she could perform some sedentary work. The ALJ focused on the following evidence: Myers had mild scoliosis and no objective evidence of pain in 1986; x-rays looked normal, but then a lesion was discovered in 1987; there was possible evidence of a sequestrated disc in 1988, but Myers refused surgery; 1 she can cook, shower, do household chores, watch television, and shop; records from Dr. Kriz showed maximum improvement; and Dr. Johnston only noted a minimal bulge and nо evidence of cord or root compression. Using the VE’s testimony regarding a claimant who could not squat or crawl, could sometimes kneel, could occasionally crawl, and would need to stretch every half-hour, the ALJ concluded a significant number of jobs! did exist which Myers could hold.
Myers filed suit in the district court, but the court affirmed, finding that the VE and ME’s testimony as well as Myers’s own testimony were substantial evidence to support the decision of the ALJ.
II. Standard of review
“We review the Secretary’s decision only to determine whether it is supported by substantial evidencе on the record as a whole and whether the Secretary applied the proper legal standard.”
Greenspan v. Shalala,
III. Discussion
To determine disability, the Commissioner uses a five-steр analysis:
The first two steps involve threshold determinations that the claimant is not presently engaged in substantial gainful activity and has an impairment or combination of impairments which significantly limits his physical or mental ability to do basic work activities. In the third step, the medical evidеnce of the claimant’s impairment(s) is compared to a list of impairments presumed severe enough to preclude any gainful activity. If the claimant’s impairment matches or is equal to one of the listed impairments, he qualifies for benefits without further inquiry. If the person сannot qualify under the listings, the evaluation proceeds to the fourth and fifth steps. At these steps, analysis is made of whether the person can do his own past work or any other work that exists in the national economy, in view of his age, education and work experience. If he cannot do his past work or other work, the claimant qualifies for benefits.
Loza v. Apfel,
The Social Security Administration’s rulings are not binding on this court, but they may be consulted when the statute at issue provides little guidance.
B.B. ex. rel. A.L.B. v. Schweiker,
The following rulings are relevant to this dispute. First, SSR 96-8p provides that a residual functional capacity (RFC) “is an assessment of an individual’s ability to do sustained work-related physical and mental activities in a work setting on а regular and continuing basis.”
Second, SSR 96-9p also provides that
[ijnitially, the RFC assessment is a function-by-function assessment based upon all of the relevant evidence of an individual’s ability to perform work-related activities .... The impact of an RFC for less than a full range of sedentary work is especially critical for individuals who have not yet attained age 50. Since age, education, and work experience are not usually significant factors in limiting the ability of individuals under age 50 to make an adjustment to other work, the conclusion whether such individuals who are limited to less than the full range of sedentary work аre disabled will depend primarily on the nature and extent of their functional limitations or restrictions. 0
The ALJ erred in failing to address the concerns of Social Security Rulings 96-8p and 96-9p in determining Myers’s Residual Functional Capacity, specifically her ability to perform all of the strength demands of sedentary work. He found that
Also, we do not find that substаntial evidence supports the ALJ’s decision. Myers presented evidence from six different doctors who all diagnosed some kind of back problem, whether it be degenerative disc disease or a ruptured disc. The ALJ appeared to rely solely on Dr. Craig, his own expert, an internist who based his opinion on an imperfect analysis of the reports of the treating physicians. Furthermore, the ALJ failed to consider the evidence carefully. For example, the ALJ cited the fact that Myers was told to lose weight to alleviate pаin; however, her doctor also advised her that losing weight would not correct her disc problem, and he consistently recommended surgery.
Finally, “[w]e have long held that ‘ordinarily the opinions, diagnoses, and medical evidence of a treating physician who is familiar with the сlaimant’s injuries, treatments, and responses should be accorded considerable weight in determining disability.’ ”
Greenspan,
Not only did the ALJ fail to take into consideration all of the evidence from the treating doctors, but he also failed to present good cause as to why he should reject it. An ALJ must consider the following factors before declining to give any weight to the opinions of a treating doctor: length of treatment, frequency of examination, nature and extent of relationship, support provided by other evidence, consistency of opinion with record, and specialization.
Newton,
Accordingly, we remand for consideration in light of the foregoing.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Myers testified that she finally agreed to have surgery, but was unable to undergo the procedure because she and her husband moved out of state.
. We have not found a case in which the Fifth Circuit has explicitly applied these rulings; however, other circuits have specifically addressed SSR 96-8p. In
Bladow v. Apfel,
