Plaintiff Sharon N. Ragland appeals from a district court order that affirmed the Secretary of Health and Human Services’ decision to deny her application for supplemental security income benefits under Title II of the Social Security Act.
1
It is our responsibility, in assessing the factual and legal bases for the Secretary’s challenged decision, to review the record “to determine whether the findings are supported by substantial evidence and whether the Secretary applied correct legal standards.”
Pacheco v. Sullivan,
I
Plaintiffs disability claim is based on a traumatic spinal injury that necessitated four lower back surgeries, the last performed in 1985. Her lumbosacral spine is now fixated with implanted metal rods, and further cor: rective or palliative surgery has evidently been ruled out. See R. Vol. II at 27-28,102. Despite the significant amount of surgical intervention involved, the only medical documentation in this case consists of a consultative examination report prepared at the Secretary’s request in August of 1989 by Dr. Gordon Strom, id. at 102-107, and a two-page record of emergency room treatment for a relatively minor incident of physical trauma to plaintiffs back in January of the same year, id. at 100-01.
At her March 30,1990, hearing before the administrative law judge (ALJ), plaintiff testified that she experiences stinging, burning pain radiating down both legs a majority of the time, and that her related physical limitations preclude standing longer than thirty minutes, sitting more than about twenty minutes, walking farther than three city blocks, or lifting anything weighing over five pounds. Id. at 29-30. Dr. Strom, whose physical examination of plaintiff indicated “significant back disease,” 2 acknowledged plaintiffs various exertional limitations as being “advised by her physicians,” and recommended confirming them “by obtaining records from her physician in Atlanta and if possible x-rays of her lumbosacral spine.” Id. at 104. The records and x-rays were never obtained, however, despite the fact that, even before she was examined by Dr. Strom, plaintiff provided the Secretary with the information necessary to contact several treating physicians and hospitals in Georgia, where she lived during the period of her active treatment. See id. at 60-61.
The Secretary has established a five-step evaluative sequence for determining whether a claimant is disabled.
See Williams v. Bowen,
Plaintiff challenges this determination in four interrelated respects, arguing it is not supported by substantial evidence, erroneously relies on the grids, fails to take into account plaintiffs evidence of pain, and lacks the necessary support of expert vocational testimony. For the reasons expressed below, we hold that the existing record and findings will not support the denial of benefits on the ALJ’s stated rationale and, therefore, we reverse.
II
Our approach to this case follows two fixed guideposts. The first, to which we have already referred, is the placement of the burden of proof on the Secretary at step five. The second is the principle that “[t]he grids should not be applied conclusively in a particular case ... unless the claimant could perform the full range of work required of [the pertinent RFC] category on a daily basis and unless the claimant possesses the physical capacities to perform most of the jobs in that range.”
Hargis v. Sullivan,
Our principal concern is with the ALJ’s treatment of plaintiffs asserted inability to sit for prolonged periods of time. Under the regulations, “a sedentary job is defined as one which involves sitting.” 20 C.F.R. § 404.1567(a) (emphasis added). The Secretary estimates that an eight-hour day of sedentary work should generally involve approximately six hours of sitting. Soe.Sec.Rul. 83-10. It is therefore very troubling that of the several physical limitations at issue in this ease, the ALJ made no specific findings whatsoever regarding plaintiffs alleged difficulty in sitting.
The only pertinent medical evidence in the record consists of Dr. Strom’s report, wherein he recited that “[plaintiff] has been advised by her physicians to refrain from ... prolonged ... sitting,” R. Vol. II at 104, and that “she was told that she ... was limited as far as ... the types of jobs that she could perform,”
id.
at 102. Dr. Strom did not contradict, criticize, or question the content or source of this professional advice. As already noted, he did recommend confirmation through relevant documentation, which was never obtained. Because it is the Secretary who at this stage in the evaluative sequence bears the burden of demonstrating plaintiffs ability to perform the full range of sedentary work, the evident incompleteness of the medical record — which supports plaintiff, as far as it goes — weighs heavily against the Secretary.
3
See Gatson v. Bowen,
Unlike the ALJ, the magistrate judge expressly addressed plaintiffs asserted sitting
The magistrate judge also pointed out that plaintiff “sits down to relieve back pain caused by standing.” R.Vol. I at 14. The record citation accompanying this observation directs us to plaintiffs statement that while she cooks, she has “to sit more often because of the pain in [her] legs and back.” R.Vol. II at 68. The fact that plaintiff may intermit a tiring or painful upright task with periods of seated rest (of unspecified duration and posture) does not entail any particular answer to the separate question whether she can remain seated for a prolonged period of time. 4 Finally, the magistrate judge noted that plaintiff “did not report difficulty driving (which requires sitting).” R.Vol. I at 15. Actually, plaintiff stated on her disability report that she “can drive only 30 miles,” R.Vol. II at 62, which is fairly consistent with the sitting limitation asserted throughout these proceedings.
The magistrate judge’s efforts to supply the missing administrative findings regarding plaintiffs asserted sitting limitation cannot be affirmed on our record. Therefore, because the ALJ concluded that plaintiff could perform sedentary work, and consequently relied on the grids to find her nondisabled, without first expressly determining whether and to what extent her demonstrated impairment interfered with the primary physical demand of such work, the Secretary’s decision must be reversed.
III
We add these observations to further explain our disposition. First of all, the ALJ and the magistrate judge discounted plaintiffs allegations regarding lifting limitations and, more importantly, appeared to consider her general credibility compromised, based on a claims representative’s notation following an interview that “when leaving the office, claimant picked up her four year old child ‘without difficulty.’ ” R. Vol. II at 9; R.Vol. I at 14; see R.Vol. II at 66. This observation was made on July 10, 1989, when, according to otherwise uncontroverted testimony, the “four year old child” was actually a toddler under (or just) two years of age. See R.Vol. II at 31, 34, 35 (at the hearing eight months later, plaintiff testified her younger child was then two and a half (her older child was thirteen)). Given this discrepancy, the isolated, conclusory statement of the claims representative should not have played a role in the analysis of this case without some further development of the pertinent facts.
The ALJ rejected plaintiffs assertions of disabling pain because she does not “take any medication for pain relief on a regular basis,” has not “sought any significant medical treatment within the past several years,” and, though “[i]t may well be that claimant does require assistance with heavier aspects of her housework, ... overall it appears that
Before relying on a claimant’s failure to pursue treatment or take medication as support for rejecting allegations of pain, the ALJ should consider “(1) whether the treatment at issue would restore claimant’s ability to work; (2) whether the treatment was prescribed; (3) whether the treatment was refused; and, if so, (4) whether the refusal was without justifiable excuse.”
Frey v. Bowen,
Furthermore, plaintiff testified that she has not had money or insurance for medical treatment since 1985, when she was divorced from Donald Benson. Id. at 30-31. She is at present living alone with her two children and dependent upon welfare for her income. Id. at 34-35. For pain medication, plaintiff testified that she must rely on friends, who “get pain medication and they give it to [her] ... Usually like Tylox — 4’s or Demerol, something strong. The strongest [she] can 'get and if it’s not real strong, [she will] take it and double up on it and use it anyway.” Id. at 31. Under the circumstances, the ALJ should have expressly considered the medical benefit and justifiable excuse factors specified in Frey before rejecting plaintiffs pain allegations based on her failure to pursue treatment and medication options more zealously.
As for daily activities, the record reflects significant limitations on the nature, duration, and amount of household tasks plaintiff can perform on a daily basis.
See
R.Vol. II at 31-32, 34-35, 62, 67-69, 73, 109. Thus, plaintiffs daily activities do not furnish substantial evidence discrediting her allegations of pain and demonstrating her nondisability.
See Frey,
IV
We emphasize that even a proper finding that plaintiff is not disabled solely by virtue of her pain (addressing the points discussed in section III above) would not have resolved this case in the Secretary’s favor. The Secretary would still have had to establish that plaintiff retains the exertional and nonexer-tional capacity to perform a significant number of jobs in the national economy, despite (1) the level of nondisabling pain she suffers (if it partially diminishes work capacity), and (2) the type and degree of functional limitations (sitting, standing, lifting, etc.) that restrict her occupational opportunities. In this regard, what we have said in section II of this opinion concerning the inadequacy of the record developed to satisfy the Secretary’s step five burden, the inappropriateness of the ALJ’s reliance on the grids, and the need for expert vocational testimony all undercuts the Secretary’s disposition of plaintiffs claim.
When a decision of the Secretary is reversed on appeal, it is within this court’s discretion to remand either for further administrative proceedings or for an immediate award of benefits.
Emory v. Sullivan,
The judgment of the district court is accordingly REVERSED, and the cause is REMANDED to the Secretary for an award of benefits consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed.R.App.P. 34(a); 10th Cir.R. 34.1.9. The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. Dr. Strom's pertinent findings included "an obvious significant surgical defect with deformity of the lumbar spine at the lumbosacral junction[,] ... bilateral paraspinous tenderness and obvious spasm[,] ... bilateral positive straight leg raising test in both the sitting and lying positions!,] • • • complainfts] of pain radiating in a knife like fashion from [t]he hips back into the inner aspect of her left thigh and leg[,] ... [and] a 1.5 cm difference between the right thigh and the [smaller] left thigh.” Id. at 103-04.
. The inadequacy of the primary medical record also impacts our view of the optimistic RFC determinations of the medical reviewer.
See
R.Vol. II at 84-91. What little adverse value these conclusoiy determinations might otherwise have,
see Gatson v. Bowen,
. Indeed, it is commonplace in social security case law for persons who cannot sit or stand for long periods to obtain some relief in alternating these positions.
See, e.g., Talbot,
