The Zeigler Coal Company (“Zeigler”) appeals from a decision by the Benefits Review Board (“Board”) affirming the Administrative Law Judge’s (“ALJ”) award of Black Lung Benefits to respondent Frank Lemon (“Lemon”). We reverse and remand for further findings.
I.Background
Lemon worked more than 40 years as a coal miner before retiring in January of 1980. A few days later he filed for benefits under the Black Lung Benefits Act, 30 U.S.C. §§ 901, et seq. The Department of Labor reviewed Lemon’s claim and administratively denied benefits on the ground that Lemon had failed to establish that he suffered from pneumoconiosis. Thereafter, Lemon obtained counsel and requested additional time in which to submit evidence in support of his claim. The Labor Department referred Lemon’s claim to the Office of Administrative Law Judges for a formal hearing. At this hearing, an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) reviewed evidence concerning the claimant’s: (1) pulmonary function tests; (2) arterial Blood Gas Test; and (3) two chest X-rays. In his Decision and Order Awarding Benefits, the ALJ determined that “the claimant’s proof in this case rests upon the x-ray evidence since qualifying values were not obtained in any of the pulmonary function or blood gas studies of record.” He went on to find that there were “three” x-rays of record dated March 10, 1980; September 14, 1981; and September 22, 1981. The ALJ concluded that although the first two x-rays “do not support a finding of pneumoconiosis,” a positive reading of “the September 22, 1981 x-ray” was sufficient to invoke the interim presumption of entitlement to benefits that is provided by 20 C.F.R. § 727.203(a)(1).
On appeal to the Benefits Review Board (“Board”), Zeigler pointed out that the purported “September 22, 1981 x-ray” upon which the ALJ stated he was relying does not in fact exist. Zeigler states that there were only two x-rays of record, one taken on March 10,1980, and one taken on September 14, 1981. After examining the evidence, the Board concluded that the purported “September 22 x-ray” upon which the ALJ stated he was relying was not a separate x-ray but merely a rereading of the September 14 x-ray. The Board therefore reversed and remanded “for a proper weighing of the x-ray evidence.”
In its Decision and Order on Remand, the ALJ again awarded benefits, this time ruling that the x-ray evidence was “evenly balanced” and that the claimant was thus entitled to the presumption of entitlement to benefits under the theory of the “true doubt rule.” On appeal, the Board affirmed upon determining that the ALJ had “permissibly applied the true doubt rule” to resolve the conflicting x-ray evidence in the claimant’s favor.
II.Issues
We are asked to determine whether the “true doubt rule” is invalid as an unauthorized supersedure of the Administrative Procedure Act and whether the ALJ’s finding that the x-ray evidence was evenly balanced is supported by substantial evidence.
III.Discussion
Since Lemon had more than ten years of coal mining employment and filed his claim
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between July 1, 1973, and April 1, 1980, Ms ease is governed by the “interim regulations” set forth in 20 C.F.R. § 727.
Freeman United Coal Mining Company v. OWCP,
Zeigler does not contest the ALJ’s finding that it failed to rebut the presumption of entitlement; rather the company argues that, contrary to the ALJ’s finding, Lemon was not entitled to the presumption in the first place because the medical evidence fails to establish that he suffers from a disabling respiratory or pulmonary impairment arising out of coal mine employment for a period of at least ten years.
Although this is an appeal from the decision of the Board,
“we actually review the decision of the ALJ, asMng whether it is supported by substantial evidence, is in accord with the law, and is rational. Peabody Coal v. Helms,859 F.2d 486 , 489 (7th Cir.1988). Substantial evidence is “such relevant evidence as a rational mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.”
Amax Coal Co. v. Beasley,
, The record discloses that Lemon’s family physician did not submit a report for tMs litigation, and that the claimant has not been treated for any lung disease. Moreover, the parties agree that the claimant’s pulmonary function tests and arterial blood gas test failed to meet the qualifying standards sufficient to trigger the interim presumption. 2 The'ALJ’s determination that the claimant was nevertheless entitled to the § 727 presumption thus was premised solely on his application of the true doubt rule to resolve the conflicting x-ray evidence in favor of the claimant.
Lemon had but two chest x-rays, the first taken on March 10, 1980, at the Department of Labor’s (“DOL”) request, and the second taken on September 14, 1981, at the claimant’s request. Dr. Norman Shippey, a board-certified radiologist, found the 1980 x-ray to be negative for pneumocoMosis. DOL had tMs x-ray re-read by Dr. J. Gordonson, a board-certified radiologist and a “B” reader, 3 and Dr. Gordonson also found the x-ray to be negative for pneumocoMosis. At Lemon’s request, the 1981 x-ray was read by Dr. Brent Brandon, a board-certified radiologist and “B” reader and thereafter re-read by Dr. T.R. Marshall, also a board-certified radiologist as well as a “B” reader. Both of these *1238 physicians were of the opinion that this second x-ray was positive for pneumoconiosis. Zeigler requested that this second x-ray, the subject of the controversy, be re-read and submitted the X-ray to three other physicians: (1) Dr. Barton Bridges, a board-certified radiologist and “B” reader; (2) Dr. Joseph Renn, a board-certified pulmonary specialist and “B” reader; and (3) Dr. E.J. Morgan, a board-certified pulmonary specialist and “B” reader. These three “B” readers independently determined that the second x-ray was completely negative for pneumoconiosis. Thus the x-ray evidence before the ALJ consisted of the 1980 x-ray (two negative “B” readings, zero positive readings) and the 1981 x-ray (three negative “B” readings, two positive “B” readings).
Zeigler contends that the ALJ erred both in determining that the above x-ray evidence was equally balanced and in applying the “true doubt rule” to resolve the conflict in Lemon’s favor. The “true doubt rule” is a Board-created rule approved by this court in
Freeman United Coal Mining Co. v. Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
“when equally probative but contradictory evidence is presented in the record and selection of one set of facts results in a finding for the claimant and the other leads to a finding against the claimant, the evidence must be resolved in favor of the claimant.”
Freeman,
“Very seldom will the evidence in support of and against entitlement be equally probative and equally persuasive. Indeed, it would seem to be the unusual case in which an ALJ intent on properly weighing the competing evidence, will come to the conclusion that neither side’s evidence was slightly more convincing than the other’s.”
Grizzle v. Pickands Mather & Co.,
As noted heretofore, the ALJ somehow determined that the five negative readings in this case were equally balanced by the two positive readings. In support of this conclusion, the ALJ wrote that the passage of 18 months between the 1980 x-ray that received uniformly negative readings and the 1981 x-ray that received conflicting readings was “significant in the development of pneumoconiosis.” Second, he stated that he considered “as a medical fact that the clear x-ray (like that of March 10,1980) is not as rehable an indicator of the absence of pneumoconiosis as a positive x-ray is bf its presence.”
Initially, we note that Lemon retired from the mines and thus ended his exposure to coal dust in early January 1980, and that the uneontradicted medical evidence is that two months later, on March 10, 1980, the claimant still showed no medical signs of pneumo-coniosis. In deciding that this x-ray evidence was entitled to little if any weight, the ALJ apparently assumed (without citing to any medical evidence) that pneumoconiosis is a progressive disease of the sort that might well remain undetectable until long after the patient exposures to coal dust are terminated. The record contains no scientifically or medically acceptable support for the ALJ’s theory.
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Although the ALJ viewed the evidence as pitting an earlier “clear” x-ray against a later “positive” x-ray, there is no evidence in the record to support the ALJ’s conclusion that the two positive readings of the 1981 x-ray outweigh its three negative readings so as to transform it into a “positive x-ray.” While our opinions have been critical of decisions based entirely on “head counts” of experts,
Old Ben Coal Co.,
Here, the first factor listed by the court in
Old Ben
— the age of the x-ray reading — is of no help, because all of the conflicting readings concerned the same September 1981 x-ray. Neither do the qualifications of the experts appear significantly different, as each of the experts was a certified “B” reader. On the other hand, the record discloses that the ALJ failed to consider either of the final two criteria listed in
Old Ben
— the persuasiveness of the experts’ reports and any “other relevant evidence.” Regarding the latter omission, we note that the ALJ did not have before him any other relevant evidence from the many approved medical tests and criteria to overcome the conflicting x-ray readings.
See Collins v. Director, OWCP,
IV. Conclusion
As we review the ALJ’s ruling under the substantial evidence standard, “we must take into account any evidence in the record fairly detracting from that decision, and we must reverse where we ‘cannot conscientiously find that the evidence supporting that decision is substantial.’ ”
Amax Coal,
REVERSED.
Notes
. The regulation allows the claimant to present the following types of medical evidence:
(1) A chest roentgenogram (X-ray), biopsy, or autopsy ...;
(2) Ventilatory studies ...;
(3) Blood gas studies ...;
(4) Other medical evidence, including the documented opinion of a physician exercising reasoned medical judgment ...;
(5) In the case of a deceased miner where no medical evidence is available, the affidavit of the. survivor of such miner or other persons with knowledge of the miner’s physical condition ....
20 C.F.R. § 727.203(a).
. According to the testimony of three pulmonary disease specialists, these tests showed a normal pulmonary capability and response to exercise. Each expert also independently determined that, in their opinion, the test results did not indicate that Lemon was fully cooperative or exerting his maximum effort in the course of his pulmonary function testing.
.A “B-reader” is a “physician who has demonstrated proficiency in assessing and classifying X-ray evidence of pneumoconiosis by successful completion of an examination conducted by or on behalf of the Department of Health and Human Services."
Freeman Coal, id.
at n. 4 (quoting
Mullins,
. We note that the Supreme Court has agreed to review whether the true doubt rule is appropriate under the Black Lung Benefits Act or the Administrative Procedure Act.
See Greenwich Collieres v. OWCP,
