ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral argument. See Fed. R.App. P. 34(f); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
I.
We review the Commissioner’s decision (here expressed as the ruling of the ALJ,
see Hargis v. Sullivan,
II.
Mr. Williamson, who is 5 feet six inches tall and has weighed between ninety and 120 pounds his whole life, claims disability due to low weight (103 pounds at the time of the hearing) and hypertension. His low
Because of the paucity of medical records, the ALJ requested that Mr. Williamson undergo a comprehensive medical and psychological examination. The physical examination revealed no muscle weakness, atrophy, or substantial loss of strength and no evidence of injury or illness except for hypertension. Id. at 142. The psychiatric evaluation made no psychiatric diagnosis and noted that, although he looked malnourished, Mr. Williamson reported being able to exercise regularly and having ade quate energy. Id. at 119. The report concluded, “Mr. Williamson presents himself as healthy in mind and body.” Id. at 120.
The ALJ found Dr. Davis’s assessment to be “deficient, [and] without supportive medical documentation,” and noted that there was no “medically determinable impairment that could reasonably cause such limitations.” Id. at 33. The ALJ also noted that no clinical findings supported Dr. Davis’s medical conclusions. In response to the ALJ’s questions, Mr. Williamson testified that he regularly lifted a forty-pound bag of dog food and that he “suppose[d]” he could lift up to twenty pounds “over and over again during the day.” Id. at 57. The ALJ declined to give Dr. Davis’s assessments controlling weight.
The ALJ determined that, although Mr. Williamson has always been a very small man and that he would naturally have some lifting limitations because of his size, neither Mr. Williamson’s “impairment” of low weight nor his controlled hypertension “cause significant vocational limitations.”
Id.
at 36. Accordingly, the ALJ determined at step two of the five-step sequential process,
see Williams v. Bowen,
III.
A. We first address the ALJ’s decision to discount Dr. Davis’s assessment. The Commissioner must accord “substantial weight to the testimony of a claimant’s treating physician, unless good cause is shown to the contrary.”
Frey v. Bowen,
B. At step two, Mr. Williamson bore the burden to demonstrate an impairment or combination of impairments that “significantly limits [his] physical ... ability to do basic work activities.” 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(c). An impairment giving rise to disability benefits is defined as one which “results from anatomical, physiological,
The step two severity determination is based on medical factors alone, and “does not include consideration of such vocational factors as age, education, and work experience.”
Williams,
Thus, when Congress codified the severity requirement in the regulations, it noted that a claimed “physical or mental impair
ment must be of a nature and degree of severity sufficient to justify its consideration as the
cause of failure to obtain any substantial gainful work.”
S.Rep. No.1987, 83d Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in 1954 U.S.Code Cong.
&
Ad. News 3710, 3730 (emphasis added). It appears that the ALJ assumed that Mr. Williamson’s low weight is an “abnormality” because most men of his height weigh more than he does. But nowhere in the record is there any evidence that Mr. Williamson’s failure to work for most of his life is or was caused by his low weight. Nowhere in the record does Mr. Williamson complain of symptoms like fatigue or substantial weakness associated with low weight that cause him to be unable to work. The record demonstrates that Mr. Williamson is basically healthy; that his weight, which may be abnormal for some people his height, is normal for him; and that his weight did not keep him from working for his father when he was a teenager. The fact that Mr. Williamson is, and has always been, too small to lift heavy objects all day long does not support a finding that his low weight is a “severe impairment.”
Cf. McDonald v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs.,
In short, Mr. Williamson failed to demonstrate that his low weight substantially limits his ability to engage in basic work activities. Because Mr. Williamson failed to make this threshold showing, there was no need for the ALJ to continue to the next steps in the evaluative process.
See Williams,
We uphold the Commissioner’s decision and AFFIRM the judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma.
Notes
This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court generally disfavors the citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order and judgment may be cited under the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
