R. LANIER ANDERSON, III, Circuit Judge:
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
The appellant, William P. Wiggins, is a 51-year old man who claims that various physical and psychological ailments 1 have totally and permanently disabled him from pursuing gainful employment. The appellant applied to the Social Security Administration for disability insurance benefits and for Supplemental Security Income disability benefits, and the Social Security Administration denied the appellant’s applications. The appellant then requested a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) to determine whether the appellant is entitled to the benefits he seeks. The ALJ ruled that the appellant was not permanently and totally disabled within the meaning of. the Social Security Act and therefore the appellant was not entitled to any Social Security benefits. When the Appeals Counsel of the Social Security Administration declined to review the AU’s decision, that ruling became the final decision of the defendant-appellee Secretary of Health and Human Services (“Secretary”).
The appellant thereafter sought judicial review of the Secretary’s decision in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama. The case was submitted to the district court on the pleadings, which included the administrative record, and the briefs of the parties. The district court found that the decision of the ALJ was supported by substantial evidence, and the court entered judgment in favor of the Secretary. The appellant claims that the ALJ erred in identifying and applying the relevant legal standards and that the district court should not have entered judgment for the Secretary. Finding errors of law in the opinion of the ALJ, we reverse the judgment of the district court and re
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Our standard of review for appeals from the administrative denials of Social Security benefits dictates that “[t]he findings of the Secretary as
to any fact,
if supported by substantial evidence, shall be conclusive .... ” 42 U.S.C.A. § 405(g) (West Supp. 1982) (emphasis added).
See Walden v. Schweiker,
III. FAILURE TO GIVE APPROPRIATE WEIGHT TO THE OPINION OF THE TREATING PHYSICIAN
In support of his claim of disability, the appellant introduced into the record two reports submitted by his treating physician, Dr. James F. Mracek, which contain diagnoses, medical and treatment histories, laboratory and clinical findings, and a prognosis. Dr. Mracek’s second report concluded:
Mr. Wiggins has attempted to work and after activity he has to remain in the bed for several days due to joint swelling and pain. In my opinion, he is not capable of performing his usual work or sedentary work (lifting 10 pounds, carrying or lifting small objects, sitting 6 hours a day, walking or standing max. 2 hours). It is my opinion that Mr. Wiggins has a progressive type disability which has shown no improvement and he is totally disabled.
Record on Appeal, vol. II, at 115.
Our case law requires that unless good cause is shown to the contrary, the ALJ must accord “substantial weight” or “considerable weight” to the opinion, diagnosis, and medical evidence of the claimant’s treating physician.
Walden v. Schweiker,
With respect to the appellant’s claims of heart problems, the ALJ’s opinion did refer to an
attachment
to Dr. Mracek’s first report, a hospital discharge summary signed by Dr. Hiroshi Mitsuoka relating to appellant’s hospitalization in 1976 for sharp, stabbing chest pains. The AU concluded, however, based on the findings of consulting physicians, Drs. Lewis R. Pummer and J. P. Evans, who examined the appellant respectively on July 17, 1979, and November 5,
Moreover, with respect to the appellant’s claims of disability due to arthritis, the AU’s opinion states: “The first medical finding in this file involving the musculoskeletal system was in Dr. Pummer [sic] report (Exhibit 17) .... ” Record on Appeal, vol. II, at 16-17 (emphasis added). This assertion completely ignores Dr. Mracek’s first report (Exhibit 16), filed over a month before Dr. Pummer’s report (Exhibit 17), that contains diagnoses of arthritis and a summary of the treatment for that disorder and the appellant’s response to treatment (“unimproved”).
The AU’s opinion, thus, not only fails to mention the appellant’s treating physician and the weight, if any, the AU gave to the treating physician’s evidence and opinion, but also strongly suggests that the AU did not accord the opinion of the appellant’s treating physician the weight required by law. At the very least, we are unable to determine whether the AU applied the proper legal standard and gave the treating physician’s evidence substantial or considerable weight or found good cause not to do so. If we are to provide the parties with any sort of meaningful judicial review, we must be able to ascertain whether the AU correctly followed the law. Unable to divine this from the AU’s opinion, we must reverse the district court and remand the case for reconsideration by the AU, who should evaluate all the evidence according to the respective weight required by law and should render a decision that will provide reviewing courts with the basis for determining that he applied the correct legal standards.
IV. INCORRECT STANDARD FOR EVALUATING SUBJECTIVE COMPLAINTS OF PAIN
There is another reason why the judgment in favor of the Secretary must be reversed. The AU stated that the appellant’s “subjective symptoms of chest pain, joint pain ... [would] be conceded only insofar as the complaints are supported by clinical and laboratory diagnostic techniques.” Record on Appeal, vol. II, at 15. The AU further observed that while pain by itself can be disabling, “[t]o be considered disabling within the purview of the Social Security Act, an impairment must be supported by medical findings which at least give probability to the allegations of pain as opposed to a possibility.”
Id.
at 18. These simply are erroneous statements of the law. The Fifth and Eleventh Circuits have emphatically rejected the notion that to be disabling subjective claims of pain must be supported by objective medical evidence or by clinical or laboratory findings.
Walden v. Schweiker,
The cases cited by the appellee are inapposite.
Kirkland v. Weinberger,
The appellant in the present case testified about the considerable pain he had and how this prevented him from returning to his former job as a prison guard or pursuing any other employment. This pain could be and was linked (by Dr. Mracek’s reports as well as in part by Drs. Pummer and Evans’ reports) to “medically determinable impairments”
(e.g.,
arthritis, heart disease). The AU, of course, must make credibility determinations regarding the appellant’s claims of pain. The AU, however, has no authority to reject appellant’s claims of pain simply because these complaints were not “supported by clinical or laboratory diagnostic techniques.”
5
Since
V. FAILURE TO CONSIDER COMBINED EFFECTS OF APPELLANT’S AILMENTS
The appellant correctly notes that the AU must consider not only the disabling effect of each of the appellant’s ailments individually, but also the combined effect of all of the appellant’s impairments.
Ferguson v. Schweiker,
VI. CONCLUSION
In summary, we hold that the ALJ’s opinion fails to provide this court with a basis for determining whether he applied the correct legal standard in weighing the evidence submitted by the appellant’s treating physician. We also hold that the ALJ applied the wrong legal standard when he considered the appellant’s subjective complaints of pain only insofar as these were supported by objective medical findings. In light of these errors, the district court should not have granted judgment for the Secretary and the judgment of the district court is hereby
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The appellant contends that he is under a disability as defined by the Social Security Act because he suffers from rheumatoid arthritis, gouty arthritis, a hiatal hernia, a severe anxiety reaction, heart disease, and high blood pressure.
. In
Bonner
v.
City of Prichard,
. We emphasize this point because of an apparent misperception of our role reflected in the brief of the appellee. The appellant has clearly raised several objections to the legal standards employed by the ALJ, yet the appellee’s brief argues that the only issue before the court is whether there is substantial evidence in the record to support the decision of the ALJ. Where an error of law has been made that might have affected the disposition of the case, this court cannot fulfill its statutory and constitutional duty to review the decision of the administrative agency by simply deferring to the factual findings of the ALJ.
. The appellant translates this diagnosis to mean a “history of acute myocardial infarction due to arteriosclerotic heart disease.” See Brief of Appellant at 4 n.l. The appellee does not dispute this interpretation.
. The appellant contends that the record contains clinical and laboratory support in the reports of Dr. Mracek for the appellant’s claims of pain. We need not and do not pass on the
