Mitchell v. SHHS ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion




    March 25, 1994 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ___________________


    No. 93-1612




    TIMOTHY B. MITCHELL,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,

    Defendant, Appellee.


    __________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Frank H. Freedman, Senior U.S. District Judge]
    __________________________

    ___________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    ___________
    Selya and Cyr, Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ___________________

    Timothy B. Mitchell on brief pro se.
    ___________________
    A. John Pappalardo, United States Attorney, Karen L.
    ____________________ _________
    Goodwin, Assistant United States Attorney, and Robert M.
    _______ __________
    Peckrill, Assistant Regional Counsel, Department of Health &
    ________
    Human Service, on brief for appellee.



    __________________

    __________________






















    Per Curiam. Pro se claimant Timothy Mitchell
    ___________ ___ __

    appeals a district court judgment that affirmed the denial of

    his claim for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits. A

    former competitive bicyclist, claimant applied for SSI in

    June 1989, when he was 24 years old. He claimed that he was

    disabled due to chronic pain resulting from musculoskeletal

    inflammation affecting most of his joints, particularly his

    wrists and hands. Claimant alleged that his pain was

    aggravated by repetitive motions and hot weather. In 1987,

    claimant secured a bachelors degree in cultural anthropology

    from the University of Massachusetts. He held various part-

    time jobs during and after college, including those of a

    dishwasher, psychiatric counsellor, prep cook, psychiatric

    aide, stock person, bus person, and salesperson. His last

    position was as a telephone fundraiser, which required

    frequent repetitive use of the hands in dialing and writing.

    After claimant's application was denied upon initial

    review and reconsideration, claimant represented himself at a

    hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ). The ALJ

    reviewed the conflicting medical evidence and determined that

    claimant had no exertional limitations and only a "marginally
    __

    severe somatoform disorder."1 The ALJ concluded that while


    ____________________

    1. Somatoform disorders are characterized by,"[p]hysical
    symptoms for which there are no demonstrable organic findings
    or known physiological mechanisms." See 20 C.F.R. Part 404,
    ___
    Subpart P, App. I, 12.07. This listing may be satisfied if,
    inter alia, the medical evidence documents either: (1) "[a]
    _____ ____ ______

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    the latter condition moderately impaired claimant's ability

    to maintain persistence and pace, thereby preventing him from

    performing his past work as a telephone fundraiser, it did

    not prevent the claimant from performing his other past jobs.

    Thus, the ALJ denied claimant's application at step four of

    the sequential evaluation process. See Goodermote v.
    ___ __________

    Secretary of Health and Human Services, 690 F. 2d 5, 6-7 (1st
    ______________________________________

    Cir. 1982). The district court affirmed this conclusion and

    claimant has taken a timely appeal. Having thoroughly

    reviewed the record, we also affirm for the reasons discussed

    below.

    I.

    We first review the medical and other evidence which is

    essential to a complete understanding of claimant's

    allegations. The record discloses that claimant bicycled

    16,000 kilometers (or 10,000 miles) in various races during

    the summer of 1983. He began having health problems in 1984,

    and consulted Dr. Robert Leach, an orthopedic surgeon, for

    pain behind his left knee. Claimant reported that he had

    recently had surgery on his left thigh for compartment


    ____________________

    history of multiple physical symptoms of several years
    duration, beginning before age 30, that have caused the
    individual to take medicine frequently, see a physician often
    and alter life patterns significantly; or" (2) [p]ersistent
    nonorganic disturbance of ... [s]ensation (e.g., diminished
    or heightened)" or (3) [u]nrealistic interpretation of
    physical signs or sensations associated with the
    preoccupation or belief that one has a serious disease or
    injury;...." Id., 12.07(A).
    ___

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    syndrome and that he had previously consulted numerous

    doctors and chiropractors for various other pains.2 He had

    taken Indocin (an anti-inflammatory agent) and Butazolidan (a

    rheumatoid arthritis treatment) without relief and had also

    undergone a myelogram. Apart from an area of tenderness

    around claimant's left knee semitendinosis tendon, physical

    exam was completely normal and Dr. Leach "was impressed with

    how loose [claimant] was." Dr. Leach made no diagnosis or

    recommendations. He stated that he did "not have any ideas

    as to where to go from here" in view of the extensive studies

    claimant had already undergone.

    There are no medical records from 1985, during which

    claimant was apparently enrolled in college and worked at

    various times as a prep cook and adolescent psychiatric

    counsellor. In November 1986 claimant consulted Dr. Jonathan

    Kurtis, another orthopedic surgeon, for bilateral arm pain

    associated with his job as a dishwasher. Dr. Kurtis reported

    that his evaluation was negative for a severe problem and

    that "it was thought that he had an occupational tendonitis

    of his wrist."3 Claimant graduated from college in May


    ____________________

    2. Compartment syndrome is "a condition caused by inward
    pressure of an artery reducing blood supply. It can result
    in a permanent contraction of the hand or foot." See Mosby
    ___ _____
    Medical Encyclopedia, p. 182 (1985).
    ____________________

    3. Claimant returned to Dr. Kurtis in January 1987 for left
    heel pain cause by his cross-country ski boots. In reporting
    these findings to the Social Security Administration (SSA),
    Dr. Kurtis emphasized that he had not seen claimant since

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    1987. While claimant's vocational report does not identify

    it, the medical records suggest that at some point following

    his graduation claimant either volunteered or worked in an

    administrative position with the Institute for International

    Development and Cooperation.

    In September 1987 claimant consulted Dr. Lawrence

    Schiffman, a rheumatologist, complaining of bilateral wrist

    pain while he was working as a dishwasher and a carpenter.

    He reported a history of tendonitis in his shoulders, knees,

    and elbows (epicondylitis) while also complaining of groin

    pain and lower back pain, although the latter was not

    chronic. Claimant denied morning stiffness and sleep

    problems. Physical examination disclosed that claimant had a

    full range of musculoskeletal motion, although he experienced

    tenderness at the base of the thumb and Achilles tendon. Dr.

    Schiffman recorded an impression of tendonitis and prescribed

    Feldene, an arthritis medication. Follow-up lab tests for

    rheumatoid arthritis were negative.4 Claimant apparently

    travelled to Africa at some point in 1988 and returned to Dr.

    Schiffman in April with complaints of pain at the base of the

    thumbs and groin. He again denied morning stiffness; no



    ____________________

    1987 and had no diagnosis consistent with chronic disability.

    4. In January 1988, Dr. Schiffman advised claimant that he
    had been unable to make a diagnosis of systemic tissue
    connective disease (arthritis) based on his laboratory tests
    and physical examination.

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    swelling was present. Apart from the areas of tenderness

    noted, physical exam was essentially normal. Dr. Schiffman's

    again recorded an impression of tendonitis and continued to

    prescribe medications. Follow-up lab tests for rheumatoid

    arthritis, Lyme disease, and HIV were negative.

    At some point during 1988 claimant also travelled to

    Denmark. There he sought further evaluation of his pain.

    Claimant returned to Dr. Schiffman in July 1988 complaining

    of bilateral wrist, groin, and thigh pain. He was then

    taking Ibuprofen. Claimant reported that he was able to swim

    but that this resulted in increased pain. Physical exam

    disclosed no swelling nor other positive findings. Dr.

    Schiffman advised claimant to stop swimming and prescribed

    ultrasound therapy for his wrists. Between July and September

    1988 claimant underwent weekly ultrasound treatments at the

    Easthampton Physical Therapy Services. He reported

    experiencing some improvement from the pain in his wrists,

    although he did not attribute it to the treatments.5 At the

    conclusion of the treatments Dr. Schiffman referred claimant

    to Dr. Allison Ryan, a specialist in neurology and

    psychiatry, stating that he had "not been able to establish a



    ____________________

    5. Claimant also consulted an occupational therapist at the
    Communication Enhancement Clinic of the Children's Hospital
    in Boston, although he was not referred there by any health
    care providers identified in the record. Claimant sought
    computer components to eliminate the need for repetitive
    wrist motions.

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    diagnosis" although he felt claimant's symptoms were "most

    likely due to an overuse syndrome, worsened by

    deconditioning."6

    In November 1988 claimant applied for services at the

    Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission (MRC). Shortly

    thereafter he began working part-time as a telephone

    fundraiser for the Progressive Group, Inc. On January 4,

    1989, claimant returned to Dr. Schiffman, continuing to

    complain of "tendonitis" in his wrists and knees. Physical

    exam again disclosed no swelling and a full range of motion.

    Claimant denied morning stiffness and reportedly was walking

    regularly (10-20 minutes). On the following day, claimant

    was examined by Dr. Charles Brummer, a family physician who

    evaluated claimant for the MRC. Dr. Brummer recounted

    claimant's extensive history of complaints and unsuccessful

    treatments for pain in his legs, hips, shoulders, and elbows.

    Despite treatment with multiple medications, claimant

    reported that he experienced no relief. Physical exam was

    normal, with a full range of musculoskeletal motion and no

    swelling, heat, or redness, although claimant subjectively

    complained of pain with motion and palpation. Dr. Brummer

    concluded that claimant suffers from a soft tissue


    ____________________

    6. We note that following his hearing before the ALJ,
    claimant submitted a letter to the Appeals Council wherein he
    alleged that Dr. Ryan concluded that claimant has chronic
    pain syndrome and fibromyalgia, a condition discussed infra.
    _____
    However, Dr. Ryan's records are not before us.

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    inflammatory disease such as chronic tendonitis or, "more

    probably a fibromyositis or fibromyalgia syndrome" which

    often respond poorly to medications.7 He suggested that

    claimant was not capable of work and advised him to avoid

    significant lifting, climbing, or repetitive motions. Based

    on Dr. Brummer's evaluation, in January 1989 the MRC

    determined that claimant was eligible for vocational

    rehabilitation services as a severely handicapped

    individual.8 Claimant also began weekly acupuncture

    treatments with Jonathan Klate, Ph.D., a licensed

    acupuncturist. Dr. Klate continued to treat claimant

    throughout the time his claim was pending and submitted a


    ____________________

    7. Fibromyalgia is pain in the fibrous tissues, muscles,
    tendons, ligaments, and other white connective tissues,
    frequently affecting the low back, neck, shoulders and
    thighs. See The Merck Manual (16th ed. 1992), pp. 1369-70.
    ___ _________________
    As Dr. Brummer's report suggests, the term fibromyalgia is
    often used interchangeably with fibromyositis, or fibrositis.
    See Lisa v. Dept. of Health and Human Services, 940 F.2d 40,
    ___ ____ __________________________________
    43 (2nd Cir. 1991). This condition has only been recognized
    over the last several years. It causes severe
    musculoskeletal pain, stiffness and fatigue due to sleep
    disturbances, although physical examinations will generally
    be normal. See Preston v. Secretary of Health and Human
    ___ _______ ________________________________
    Services, 854 F.2d 815, 818 (6th Cir. 1988). The disease
    ________
    cannot be confirmed by objective tests, rather, the diagnosis
    is made by exclusion and the elicitation of tenderness at
    certain "'focal tender points.'" Id. Fibrositis patients may
    ___
    also have psychological disorders; the disease afflicts women
    significantly more often than men. Id.
    ___



    8. It appears that the MRC simply assisted claimant in
    securing computer software and components that would allow
    him to pursue employment without exacerbating his condition.


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    report to the SSA which opined that claimant was

    significantly disabled.

    Claimant resigned from his position as a telephone

    fundraiser around June 29, 1989, claiming that he was

    physically unable to meet the job's requirements due to wrist

    and hand pain aggravated by warmer weather. He applied for

    SSI benefits on the same day. Claimant was subsequently

    examined by two internists on behalf of the SSA, Dr. Enrico

    Petrillo and Dr. Dwight Robinson. Dr. Petrillo reported a

    normal physical exam and concluded that claimant had

    musculoskeletal symptoms of burning and pain in the muscles

    and tendons bilaterally. He did not assess claimant's

    residual functional capacity (RFC). Dr. Robinson found that

    claimant exhibited 20 degree flexion contractures of both

    elbows, but that claimant's joint exam was otherwise

    unremarkable. In particular he noted that there was no

    swelling or tenderness and no muscle atrophy. Dr. Robinson

    indicated that claimant might have a variant of fibromyalgia

    and that his functional ability was clearly limited by his

    symptoms, although he did not assess claimant's RFC. He

    advised claimant to pursue gradual muscle strengthening

    exercises and possibly to try an antidepressant.9




    ____________________

    9. Dr. Robinson also noted that claimant might have an early
    form of scleroderma, a disease that would not account for
    claimant's symptoms.

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    Based on the aforementioned medical evidence, the SSA

    secured an assessment of claimant's exertional RFC from Dr.

    Harvey Wald, a non-examining consultant. Dr. Wald concluded

    that claimant was limited to light work. Consequently, the

    SSA denied claimant's initial application and claimant filed

    a request for reconsideration. Claimant consulted another

    rheumatologist, Dr. Robert Gray, on December 7, 1989.

    Physical exam again disclosed that both elbows showed a 20-30

    degree loss of full extension, but flexion was full. There

    was no synovial (joint) swelling, no fibrositic trigger

    points, and no evidence of muscle atrophy or weakness. Dr.

    Gray concluded that claimant suffered from arthralgias (joint

    pain) and myalgias (muscle pain) of undetermined etiology and

    that his symptoms were atypical of fibrositis syndrome. On

    December 13, 1989, claimant was examined by Dr. Jerome

    Siegel, another consulting internist. Physical exam

    disclosed that claimant appeared well, had no history of

    sleep disturbance, and again exhibited a full range of motion

    with no synovial thickening. No trigger point tenderness

    areas were palpated. Shoulder x-rays and lab tests were

    normal. Dr. Siegel made a differential diagnosis of pain

    disorder involving the joints with questionable fibromyalgia,

    somatization disorder, and chronic pain disorder. Neither

    Dr. Gray nor Dr. Siegel assessed claimant's RFC.





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    Finally, on January 24, 1990, claimant was evaluated for

    the SSA by Dr. Sanford Bloomberg, a psychiatrist. Claimant

    reported that he suffered from a "painful condition" that

    affected essentially all of his major joints although his

    complaints were "completely subjective." Although claimant

    reported that his activities had become extremely constricted

    as a result, he was then taking graduate courses and applying

    to graduate school at the University of Massachusetts. He

    was also the editor of his church newsletter and participated

    in a young adult group. Despite being able to shop, cook,

    and participate in the aforementioned activities, claimant

    professed that he was in constant pain. He denied trouble

    sleeping. Dr. Bloomberg stated that, "[t]he only diagnosis I

    would make would be a somatoform pain disorder, with no

    related organic pathology, which so far, can be specifically

    identified to document the diagnosis that some physicians

    have made for him, fibrocytis or fibromyalgia." Dr.

    Bloomberg noted that where one local expert (presumably

    referring to Dr. Gray) had concluded that claimant did not

    have fibrositis, claimant's complaints of pain were grossly

    in excess of what one would expect if he had any

    pathology.10 While Dr. Bloomberg did not assess claimant's



    ____________________

    10. Dr. Bloomberg also observed that claimant's alleged
    incapacity was not objectively observable and that claimant
    presented as "vigorous, full of energy, walking and sitting
    down and rising ... with no difficulty apparent."

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    RFC, the SSA secured a mental RFC evaluation from Dr. Joseph

    Lichtman, a psychologist. Dr. Lichtman concluded that

    claimant suffered from a somatization disorder which would

    often result in deficiencies of persistence, concentration,

    and pace resulting in a failure to complete tasks in a timely

    manner. However, he found that claimant's activities of

    daily living and ability to maintain social functioning were

    only slightly limited, and that claimant never suffered from

    episodes of deterioration or decompensation in work or work-

    like settings.

    The ALJ credited Dr. Lichtman's functional findings in

    concluding that claimant was not disabled. He specifically

    found that claimant does not have a medically determinable

    physical impairment that could reasonably be expected to

    result in the degree of pain and functional loss that

    claimant has alleged. The ALJ then evaluated claimant's

    subjective pain complaints in accordance with Avery v.
    _____

    Secretary of Health and Human Services, 797 F.2d 19, (1st
    _________________________________________

    Cir. 1986), and concluded that claimant's subjective

    allegations were not credible in view of claimant's

    activities as a graduate student and church member, the fact

    that there was no physical basis for claimant's pain, and the

    fact that claimant took no medications at the time of the







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    hearing.11 The ALJ found that claimant's residual

    functional capacity was not significantly restricted

    exertionally and that his somatoform disorder only prevented

    him from performing his past job as a telephone fundraiser.

    After the hearing claimant submitted additional letters to

    the Appeals Council where he recounted that he had begun a

    course of treatment with amitriptyline, an anti-depressant

    used to treat fibromyalgia. The Appeals Council declined

    review, thus rendering the ALJ's decision final.

    II.

    We are bound to affirm the Secretary if his decision is

    supported by substantial evidence on the record as a whole.

    See, e.g., Rodriguez v. Secretary of Health and Human
    ___ ____ _________ _________________________________

    Services, 647 F.2d 218, 222 (1st Cir. 1981). Any claimant
    ________

    seeking disability benefits bears the initial burden of

    proving that his condition prevents him from performing his

    former type of work, not just that he cannot return to a
    ____

    particular job. See Gray v. Heckler, 760 F.2d 369, 372 (1st
    ___ ____ _______

    Cir. 1985). And, as the Secretary's regulations provide that

    even part time work may constitute substantial gainful

    activity, the fact that all of claimant's past positions were

    part time jobs does not require a finding of disability. See
    ___

    Davis v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, 915 F.2d
    _____ ________________________________________


    ____________________

    11. Claimant had been accepted to graduate school and
    expected to attend classes for two, eight-hour days per week
    at the time of the hearing.

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    186, 189 (6th Cir. 1990); 20 C.F.R. 416.972(a)(work may be

    substantial even if it is done on a part time-basis).

    On appeal, claimant argues that the evidence establishes

    that he meets the Somatoform Disorder Listing ( 12.07)

    because he has repeatedly suffered from episodes of

    deterioration or decompensation at work, as evidenced by the

    fact that he has withdrawn from several of his past jobs due

    to wrist tendonitis. Claimant also contends that the ALJ

    should have given more weight to the reports of his health

    care providers (e.g., Drs. Schiffman, Brummer, and Klate),

    particularly where the doctors who assessed claimant's

    residual functional capacity did not even examine him.

    Claimant emphasizes that he is unable to use his upper

    extremities and, since most jobs entail this requirement, he

    is unable to perform his past jobs and any other substantial

    gainful activity. Each of these arguments must fail given

    our limited standard of review and the conflicting evidence

    in the record.

    First, while it is true that the ALJ found that

    claimant satisfied three of the paragraph A criteria required

    to meet the Somatoform Disorder Listing, see n. 1, supra, the
    ___ _____

    record amply supports the ALJ's conclusion that claimant does

    not suffer from the degree of functional loss required to

    meet the paragraph B criteria of 12.07. Thus, even if

    claimant resigned from his job as a telephone fundraiser due



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    to increased pain, this alone does not establish that he

    experienced the repeated episodes of deterioration in the

    work place required to satisfy 12.07. Moreover, claimant's

    testimony and contact with the SSA supports the ALJ's

    conclusion that his activities of daily living and social

    functioning were not significantly impaired. Claimant

    resides with seven people, is able to do some cooking,

    cleaning, writing, and driving, in addition to participating

    in church activities and attending graduate school while his

    SSI claim was pending. Even with the restrictions claimant

    has identified, these activities do not suggest a level of

    impairment consistent with total disability. Thus, the ALJ

    did not err in concluding that claimant failed to prove that

    he satisfies the Somatoform Disorder Listing.

    With respect to claimant's second contention, it is

    well-established in this circuit that a treating physician's

    opinion may be rejected by the Secretary, who may accord

    greater weight to his own experts. See, e.g., Keating v.
    ___ ____ _______

    Secretary of Health and Human Services, 848 F.2d 271, 272
    ________________________________________

    (1st Cir. 1988)(per curiam); Barrientos v. Secretary of
    __________ _____________

    Health and Human Services, 820 F.2d 1, 2-3 (1st Cir.
    ____________________________

    1987)(per curiam); Sitar v. Schweiker, 671 F.2d 19, 21 (1st
    _____ _________

    Cir. 1982)(per curiam). In concluding that claimant suffered

    only from a somatoform disorder and not from a physical

    impairment (e.g. fibromyalgia), the ALJ credited the opinions



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    of Drs. Siegel and Bloomberg, both of whom suggested the

    diagnosis of somatoform disorder, and the opinion of

    claimant's own rheumatologist, Dr. Gray, who stated that

    claimant's symptoms were inconsistent with fibrositis,

    particularly noting the absence of trigger point tenderness

    and complaints of poor sleep. There was no error in the

    ALJ's decision not to place more weight on the opinions of

    claimant's other health care providers. The ALJ correctly

    observed that the disability opinion expressed by claimant's

    acupuncturist was not entitled to the weight that might be

    accorded a physician since the regulations do not recognize

    acupuncturists as acceptable medical sources. See 20 C.F.R.
    ___

    416.972(a)(acceptable medical sources include licensed

    physicians, osteopaths, psychologists, optometrists, and

    record custodians). To be sure, the record arguably

    supported a finding that claimant does suffer from a physical

    impairment - fibromyalgia - that does limit him

    exertionally. But since conflicts in the evidence are for

    the Secretary to resolve, see, e.g., Burgos Lopez v.
    ___ ____ _____________

    Secretary of Health and Human Services, 747 F.2d 37, 40 (1st
    _______________________________________

    Cir. 1984), we cannot second guess the ALJ's decision to

    credit the evidence which undermined this diagnosis.

    The ALJ rejected claimant's contention that he is

    prevented from working because he cannot use his upper

    extremities, finding that his complaints of disabling pain



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    and functional loss were not credible. An ALJ's credibility

    determinations are owed "considerable deference." Dupuis v.
    ______

    Secretary of Health and Human Services, 869 F.2d 622, 623
    ________________________________________

    (1st Cir. 1989). Nevertheless, we question the ALJ's

    conclusion that claimant suffers from no exertional
    __

    limitations. In the first place, this finding is

    contradicted by Dr. Wald, the SSA's consultant who found that

    claimant was exertionally limited to light work. And given

    the significant number of physicians who reported that

    claimant suffered at least some loss of function due to his

    subjective symptoms, we question whether the ALJ as a layman

    was qualified to conclude that claimant suffered no

    exertional limitations even if he found the cause of

    claimant's condition to be a mental impairment (i.e, a

    somatoform disorder) as opposed to a physical impairment.

    See Walston v. Gardner, 381 F.2d 580, 585 (6th Cir.
    ___ _______ _______

    1967)(pain may be disabling even if partly caused by an

    emotional problem). As a general rule, an ALJ is not

    qualified to assess residual functional capacity on the basis

    of bare medical findings. See, e.g., Berrios Lopez v.
    ___ ____ _____________

    Secretary of Health and Human Services, 951 F.2d 427, 430-31
    _______________________________________

    (1st Cir. 1991). However, the record supports the ALJ's

    implicit conclusion that claimant retained the capacity for

    light work. In particular, we note that the duties of

    claimant's past salesperson job fall within this exertional



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    category, and that "the type of work involved in a sales

    clerk job would not necessarily involve continual use of both

    arms and hands for long periods of time ...." Gray v.
    ____

    Heckler, 760 F.2d at 374. The same can be said of claimant's
    _______

    past job as a psychiatric aide. Accordingly, where

    substantial evidence supports the ALJ's conclusion that

    claimant can do at least some of his past jobs, the judgment

    of the district court is affirmed.
    ________





































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