Shirley Hutsell appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Commissioner of the Social Security Administration on her application for disability insurance benefits pursuant to Title II of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 416(i) & § 423. We reverse and remand with instructions to remand to the Social Security Administration.
I.
Hutsell was born on June 24, 1944, and has a sixth-grade education. She has a long history of mental illness. She sought professional medical attention as early as 1974 and was hospitalized at least twice for psychotic episodes prior to 1990. In 1991, Hutsell was again hospitalized; according to the records of George W. Jackson Community Mental Health Center in Jones-boro, Arkansas, on October 15, 1991, Hut-sell’s husband admitted her, “rambling to the point of incoherence,” to the hospital because she had been hearing and seeing things, locked herself in the bathroom, and urinated on the floor.
Hutsell has been diagnosed with various chronic schizophrenia-based disorders, including Schizoaffective Disorder, Bipolar Type. 2 Her intellectual functioning is borderline. 3 She takes several different medications, including antipsychotic drugs, and frequently reports to her primary treating physician, Dr. Mark Baltz, for medication checks and adjustment. In 1992, neu-ro/clinical psychologist Dr. William Wilkins concluded that Hutsell’s condition “could evolve into a reasonably short term frank psychosis” if confronted with stress but that with medication and a low-stress environment Hutsell would likely continue to do well. In 1993, Dr. Joseph Crupié observed that Hutsell’s “prognosis for a recurrent Schizophrenic episode is good.” No doctors have noted any evidence of malingering or exaggeration.
On a daily basis, with medication, Hut-sell’s symptoms include depression, memory loss, and confusion. Hutsell suffers from periods of depression and from shaky spells two or three times a week. Side effects from her medication include drowsiness and occasional loss of balance. Hut-sell generally rises early and makes breakfast for herself and her daughter. During the day, Hutsell cooks, cleans, does laundry, and sometimes visits friends or socializes at the local senior citizen center. Her housework is occasionally unfinished because she forgets what she is doing. She watches a few hours of television, reads the newspaper, and listens to the radio for a few hours. Hutsell drives only in town and shops for groceries but she often must make several trips because of her memory problems. Her brother-in-law sometimes shops for her.
Hutsell’s past relevant work experience includes that of a cook and a cook’s helper. Hutsell stated that when she worked full-time, her primary employer let her leave work and take time off when necessary. Hutsell’s work history shows that her income declined in 1990 and 1991. She earned $2790.07 in 1991 and $1815.75 in 1990, which is about $6000 less than the year before. Since her 1991 discharge from the hospital, Hutsell has not engaged in full-time employment. Hutsell has, however, worked as a temporary part-time or fill-in employee, although the number of hours that she has worked are minimal. She had no reported income in 1992, 1994, or 1995, $427 .52 in 1993, and $2572.00 in 1996, when she worked as a temporary “fill in” dishwasher.
On August 28, 1992, Hutsell filed an application for disability benefits, alleging an onset date of October 31, 1990. Hutsell asserts that she is unable to work because of a nervous breakdown and mental problems. The Social Security Administration denied Hutsell’s application initially and again on reconsideration. Hutsell then requested and received a hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ). The ALJ denied benefits in 1994, and Hutsell appealed the decision to the Appeals Council, which remanded the case. In 1996, an ALJ again denied Hutsell benefits, and again the Appeals Council remanded.
After a third hearing, an ALJ issued an opinion on May 28, 1998, again denying benefits. The ALJ evaluated Hutsell’s claim according to the five-step sequential analysis prescribed by the social security regulations.
See
20 C.F.R. §§ 404.1520(a) — (f);
see also Bowen v. Yuckert,
Although the ALJ completed a Psychiatric Review Technique Form (PRTF), the
Hutsell again appealed. This time, the Appeals Council denied her request for further review. Accordingly, the ALJ’s judgment became the final decision of the Commissioner. Hutsell then sought review in the district court, which granted summary judgment in favor of the Commissioner. Hutsell now appeals, arguing that the ALJ’s functional capacity determination is not supported by substantial evidence in the record. She also contends that the ALJ erred in determining that she could return to her past relevant work. At oral argument, Hutsell’s counsel added that the case should be remanded pursuant to our recently issued opinion in
Lauer v. Apfel,
II.
Our role is to determine whether the Commissioner’s findings are supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole.
Prosch v. Apfel,
With regard to mental disorders, the Commissioner’s decision “must take into account evidence indicating that the claimant’s true functional ability may be substantially less than the claimant asserts or wishes.”
Parsons v. Heckler,
Although the ALJ bears the primary responsibility for assessing a claimant’s residual functional capacity based on all relevant evidence, a claimant’s residual functional capacity is a medical question.
Lauer,
In this case, the ALJ’s residual functional capacity assessment was not properly informed and supported by “some medical evidence” in the record, see id., and thus it cannot stand. Hutsell’s medical records show that her impairment is not limited to her ability to engage in close interpersonal contact and for abstract thinking.
Hutsell has been hospitalized at least three times for psychotic episodes that occurred unpredictably. Her medication helps to control her condition but does not cure it or alleviate the possibility that Hutsell will relapse or decompensate. Dr. Baltz has not discharged Hutsell from treatment, continuing to prescribe medication and requiring her to see him frequently. He noted in 1996 and 1997 that Hutsell reported that she was working, but his records offer no opinion on Hutsell’s work-related capabilities. A treating doctor’s silence on the claimant’s work capacity does not constitute substantial evidence supporting an ALJ’s functional capacity determination when the doctor was not asked to express an opinion on the matter and did not do so, particularly when that doctor did not discharge the claimant from treatment. Id. at 705. Moreover, Dr. Baltz’s notes from Hutsell’s August 30, 1996, visit disclose that although Hutsell was doing “reasonably well,” she had had “a near syncopal episode at work.”
Both consulting psychiatrists who addressed Hutsell’s work-related functional capacity, Dr. Fowler and Dr. Loop, concluded that Hutsell’s capacity for sustained employment is nonexistent. The opinion of Dr. Harris, the consulting psychologist, is the only medical evidence addressing Hutsell’s work-related capabilities that is at all supportive of the conclusion that Hutsell may have some ability to work, but even he found Hutsell to be far more impaired than did the ALJ. Dr. Harris concluded that she was seriously limited in most areas of work-related performance and had no useful ability to function in the areas of dealing with work stress and maintaining concentration and attention. No medical evidence supports the ALJ’s conclusion that Hutsell is only slightly impaired and that her only significant limitations are in her capacity for abstract thinking and for close interpersonal contact.
The Commissioner argues what would generally be valid reasons for discounting the opinions of each of the various consulting medical professionals (including Dr. Harris), but in this case, that argument serves only to highlight the fact that no medical opinion supports the ALJ’s residual functional capacity determination. We also believe that the Commissioner erroneously relied too heavily on indications in the medical record that Hutsell was “doing well,” because doing well for the purposes of a treatment program has no necessary relation to a claimant’s ability to work or to her work-related functional capacity.
See, e.g., Gude v. Sullivan,
Hutsell’s 1995 hearing statement, “I could wash dishes,” does not require a different conclusion, particularly because she also stated that she would likely still have the periodic spells that forced her to leave work when she was working full-time. The Commissioner’s decision “must take into account evidence indicating that the claimant’s true functional ability may be substantially less that the claimant asserts or wishes.”
Parsons,
Because the briefs in this case were filed before
Lauer,
the Commissioner discounts most of the medical record and instead relies primarily on Hutsell’s daily activities,
see Black v. Apfel,
The medical evidence uniformly indicates that the stress of any sustained work is more than Hutsell can handle. Hutsell has gone through three administrative hearings, three appeals to the Appeal Council, and many psychological evaluations arranged by both her attorney and the Social Security Administration, and no medical evidence demonstrates that she can be expected to engage in work on a sustained basis. Even putting to one side the evaluations of the consulting psychiatric specialists, Hutsell’s records show that she is subject to erratic periods of breakdown, that she suffers from moderate to complete impairment in work-related skills, and that she is employable only by those who will tolerate her periods of instability.
The Commissioner asserts that Dr. Harris’s opinion, which itself notes that Hut-sell’s abilities in some areas are “poor to none,” supports a finding that Hutsell is not disabled because he assessed her as “fair” in most categorizations. In
Cantrell v. Apfel,
Hutsell’s minimal daily activities are consistent with chronic mental disability,
see
20 C.F.R. Pt. 404, Subpt. P., App. 1, § 12.00(E) (those with chronic mental illness often show fewer symptoms when in structured, low-stress environment). Hut-sell’s condition may be in remission, but “it is inherent in psychotic illnesses that periods of remission will occur, and that such remission does not mean that the disability has ceased.”
Andler,
Based upon our review of the record, and having given due deference to the ALJ’s findings, we see no reason to prolong this case into its second decade. “In reviewing administrative decisions, it is the duty of the Court to evaluate all of the evidence in the record, taking into account whatever in the record fairly detracts from the ALJ’s decision.”
Easter,
Accordingly, the judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded to the district court with instructions to remand the ease to the Social Security Administration for an award of benefits.
Notes
. Schizophrenia is "a common type of psychosis, characterized by a disorder in perception, content of thought, and thought processes ... and extensive withdrawal....” Stedman's Medical Dictionary 1579 (26th ed.1995). Schizoaffective means "[hjaving an admixture of symptoms suggestive of both schizophrenia and affective (mood) disorder.” Id. at 1578.
. Borderline intellectual functioning is a condition defined as an IQ score within the 71-84 range, while mental retardation is a score of about 70 or below. See American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 39-40, 684 (4th ed.1994).
