[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 116 (Friday, June 17, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 35188-35199]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-11886]



[[Page 35188]]

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SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION

20 CFR Parts 404 and 416

[Regulation Nos. 4 and 16]
RIN 0960-AF19


Evidentiary Requirements for Making Findings About Medical 
Equivalence

AGENCY: Social Security Administration.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: We propose to revise our regulations that pertain to the 
processing of claims for disability benefits under title II and title 
XVI of the Social Security Act (the Act). The proposed revisions would 
make the language in the rules we use under title II of the Act for 
making findings about medical equivalence consistent with the language 
in the rules that we use under title XVI of the Act. The proposed 
revisions would also clarify our rules about the evidence we use when 
we make findings about medical equivalence for adults and children. We 
also propose to update and clarify our rules that explain the Listing 
of Impairments (the listings) and how your impairment(s) can meet a 
listing.

DATES: To be sure your comments are considered, we must receive them by 
August 16, 2005.

ADDRESSES: You may give us your comments by: using our Internet site 
facility (i.e., Social Security Online) at http://policy.ssa.gov/pnpublic.nsf/LawsRegs or the Federal eRulemaking Portal at http://www.regulations.gov; e-mail to [email protected]; telefax to (410) 
966-2830, or letter to the Commissioner of Social Security, P.O. Box 
17703, Baltimore, Maryland 21235-7703. You may also deliver them to the 
Office of Regulations, Social Security Administration, 100 Altmeyer 
Building, 6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21235-6401, 
between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on regular business days. Comments are 
posted on our Internet site, at http://policy.ssa.gov/pnpublic.nsf/LawsRegs, or you may inspect them on regular business days by making 
arrangements with the contact person shown in this preamble.
    Electronic Version: The electronic file of this document is 
available on the date of publication in the Federal Register at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html. It is also available on the Internet 
site for SSA (i.e., Social Security Online) at http://policy.ssa.gov/pnpublic.nsf/LawsRegs.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Augustine, Social Insurance 
Specialist, Office of Regulations, Social Security Administration, 100 
Altmeyer Building, 6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21235-
6401, (410) 965-0020 or TTY (410) 966-5609. For information on 
eligibility or filing for benefits, call our national toll-free number, 
1-800-772-1213 or TTY 1-800-325-0778, or visit our Internet Web site, 
Social Security Online, at http://www.socialsecurity.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: We propose to revise our regulations that 
explain how we make findings about whether your impairment(s) medically 
equals a listing. Since February 11, 1997, Sec.  416.926, our 
regulation for making findings about medical equivalence under title 
XVI, has included different language from Sec.  404.1526, our 
regulation about medical equivalence under title II. We are now 
proposing to update Sec.  404.1526 so that it is the same as Sec.  
416.926.
    As we discuss in more detail below, we are also proposing revisions 
to clarify language that was at issue in the decision in Hickman v. 
Apfel, 187 F.3d 683 (7th Cir. 1999), about the evidence we consider 
when we make findings about medical equivalence. When we issue any 
final rules, we will consider whether to rescind the Acquiescence 
Ruling (AR) that we issued in response to the court's decision (AR 00-
2(7)) and to restore national uniformity in our adjudications.
    In addition, we are proposing to update and clarify our rules in 
Sec. Sec.  404.1525 and 416.925. As we explain below, the proposed 
changes are not substantive.
    We are also proposing minor editorial changes throughout Sec. Sec.  
404.1525, 404.1526, 416.925, and 416.926, as well as conforming changes 
in other regulations to reflect the changes we are proposing in these 
sections.

What Programs Would These Proposed Regulations Affect?

    These proposed regulations would affect disability determinations 
and decisions that we make under title II and title XVI of the Act. In 
addition, to the extent that Medicare entitlement and Medicaid 
eligibility are based on whether you qualify for disability benefits 
under title II or title XVI, these proposed regulations would also 
affect the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

Who Can Get Disability Benefits?

    Under title II of the Act, we provide for the payment of disability 
benefits if you are disabled and belong to one of the following three 
groups:
     Workers insured under the Act,
     Children of insured workers, and
     Widows, widowers, and surviving divorced spouses (see 
Sec.  404.336) of insured workers.
    Under title XVI of the Act, we provide for Supplemental Security 
Income (SSI) payments on the basis of disability if you are disabled 
and have limited income and resources.

How Do We Define Disability?

    Under both the title II and title XVI programs, disability must be 
the result of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment 
or combination of impairments that is expected to result in death or 
which has lasted or is expected to last for a continuous period of at 
least 12 months. Our definitions of disability are shown in the 
following table:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Disability means you
                                                      have a medically
 If you file a claim under . .  And you are . . .       determinable
               .                                     impairments(s) as
                                                    described above that
                                                      result in . . .
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title II......................  An adult or child  The inability to do
                                                    any substantial
                                                    gainful activity
                                                    (SGA).
Title XVI.....................  A person age 18    The inability to do
                                 or older.          any SGA.
Title XVI.....................  A person under     Marked and severe
                                 age 18.            functional
                                                    limitations.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

How Do We Decide Whether You Are Disabled?

    If you are seeking benefits under title II of the Act, or if you 
are an adult seeking benefits under title XVI of the Act, we use a 
five-step ``sequential evaluation process'' to decide whether you are 
disabled. We describe this five-step process in our regulations at 
Sec. Sec.  404.1520 and 416.920. We follow the five steps in order and 
stop as soon as we can make a determination or decision. The steps are:
    1. Are you working, and is the work you are doing substantial 
gainful activity? If you are working and the work you are doing is 
substantial gainful activity, we will find that you are not disabled, 
regardless of your medical condition or your age, education, and work 
experience. If you are not, we will go on to step 2.

[[Page 35189]]

    2. Do you have a ``severe'' impairment? If you do not have an 
impairment or combination of impairments that significantly limits your 
physical or mental ability to do basic work activities, we will find 
that you are not disabled. If you do, we will go on to step 3.
    3. Do you have an impairment(s) that meets or medically equals the 
severity of an impairment in the listings? If you do, and the 
impairment(s) meets the duration requirement, we will find that you are 
disabled. If you do not, we will go on to step 4.
    4. Do you have the residual functional capacity to do your past 
relevant work? If you do, we will find that you are not disabled. If 
you do not, we will go on to step 5.
    5. Does your impairment(s) prevent you from doing any other work 
that exists in significant numbers in the national economy, considering 
your residual functional capacity, age, education, and work experience? 
If it does, and it meets the duration requirement, we will find that 
you are disabled. If it does not, we will find that you are not 
disabled.
    We use a different sequential evaluation process for children who 
apply for payments based on disability under SSI. If you are already 
receiving benefits, we also use a different sequential evaluation 
process when we decide whether your disability continues. See 
Sec. Sec.  404.1594, 416.924, 416.994, and 416.994a of our regulations. 
However, all of these processes include steps at which we consider 
whether your impairment(s) meets or medically equals one of our 
listings.

What Are the Listings?

    The listings are examples of impairments that we consider severe 
enough to prevent you as an adult from doing any gainful activity. If 
you are a child seeking SSI payments based on disability, the listings 
describe impairments that we consider severe enough to result in marked 
and severe functional limitations. Although the listings are contained 
only in appendix 1 to subpart P of part 404 of our regulations, we 
incorporate them by reference in the SSI program in Sec.  416.925 of 
our regulations, and apply them to claims under both title II and title 
XVI of the Act.

How Do We Use the Listings?

    The listings are in two parts. There are listings for adults (part 
A) and for children (part B). If you are a person age 18 or over, we 
apply the listings in part A when we assess your claim, and we never 
use the listings in part B.
    If you are a person under age 18, we first use the criteria in part 
B of the listings. If the listings in part B do not apply, and the 
specific disease process(es) has a similar effect on adults and 
children, we then use the criteria in part A. (See Sec. Sec.  404.1525 
and 416.925.) If your impairment(s) does not meet any listing, we will 
also consider whether it medically equals any listing; that is, whether 
it is as medically severe. (See Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 416.926.)

What if You Do Not Have an Impairment(s) That Meets or Medically Equals 
a Listing?

    We use the listings only to decide that you are disabled or that 
you are still disabled. We will never deny your claim or decide that 
you no longer qualify for benefits because your impairment(s) does not 
meet or medically equal a listing. If you have a severe impairment(s) 
that does not meet or medically equal any listing, we may still find 
you disabled based on other rules in the ``sequential evaluation 
process.'' Likewise, we will not decide that your disability has ended 
only because your impairment(s) does not meet or medically equal a 
listing.
    Also, when we conduct reviews to determine whether your disability 
continues, we will not find that your disability has ended because we 
have changed a listing. Our regulations explain that, when we change 
our listings, we continue to use our prior listings when we review your 
case, if you qualified for disability benefits or SSI payments based on 
our determination or decision that your impairment(s) met or medically 
equaled a listing. In these cases, we determine whether you have 
experienced medical improvement, and if so, whether the medical 
improvement is related to the ability to work. If your condition(s) has 
medically improved, so that you no longer meet or medically equal the 
prior listing, we evaluate your case further to determine whether you 
are currently disabled. We may find that you are currently disabled, 
depending on the full circumstances of your case. See Sec. Sec.  
404.1594(c)(3)(i) and 416.994(b)(2)(iv)(A). If you are a child who is 
eligible for SSI payments, we follow a similar rule when we decide 
whether you have experienced medical improvement in your condition(s). 
See Sec.  416.994a(b)(2).

Why Are We Proposing To Revise Our Evidentiary Requirements for Making 
Findings About Medical Equivalence?

    Current Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 416.926 do not contain the same 
language because of changes we made to Sec.  416.926 in final rules 
that we published on February 11, 1997. On that date, we published 
interim final rules to implement the childhood disability provisions of 
Public Law 104-193, the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity 
Reconciliation Act of 1996. The rules became effective on April 14, 
1997 (62 FR 6408).
    Before April 14, 1997, Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 416.926 were 
essentially identical, with only minor differences specific to titles 
II and XVI. However, Sec.  416.926 applied only to adults; our rules 
for evaluating medical equivalence for children under the SSI program 
were in Sec.  416.926a of our regulations, along with our policies 
about functional equivalence in children. In the interim final rules 
that became effective on April 14, 1997, we moved the rules for medical 
equivalence in children into the same section as the rules for medical 
equivalence in adults, reserving Sec.  416.926a solely for functional 
equivalence.
    Before April 14, 1997, we provided more detailed rules for 
determining medical equivalence for children in Sec.  416.926a than in 
the corresponding rules for determining medical equivalence for adults 
in Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 416.926. We adopted this language in our 
childhood regulations from internal operating instructions about 
medical equivalence that we applied to all individuals. When we revised 
Sec.  416.926 in 1997, we decided to use the more detailed rules for 
both children and adults. We explained in the preamble to the interim 
final rules that:

[w]e decided to use the provisions of former Sec.  416.926a(b) to 
explain our rules for determining medical equivalence for both 
adults and children. This is not a substantive change, but a clearer 
statement of our longstanding policy on medical equivalence than was 
previously included in prior Sec.  416.926(a), as it was clarified 
for children in prior Sec.  416.926a(b). This merely allows us to 
address only once in our regulations the policy of medical 
equivalence, which is and always has been the same for adults and 
children.

62 FR at 6413

    While we did not revise Sec.  404.1526 when we revised Sec.  
416.926 in 1997, we also recognized that there was no substantive 
difference between the two rules. We noted in the preamble that 
``[a]lthough some of the text of [Sec.  416.926(a)] will differ from 
the text of

[[Page 35190]]

Sec.  404.1526(a), both sections * * * will continue to provide the 
same substantive rules.'' 62 FR at 6413. Since we did not revise Sec.  
404.1526 when we published the interim final rules for evaluating 
disability in children, we also did not revise it when we published 
final rules in 2000. 65 FR 54747, 54768 (2000). We are now proposing to 
revise Sec.  404.1526 so that it includes the same language as Sec.  
416.926.
    In addition, we propose to make minor revisions to the language in 
our rules on medical equivalence to clarify that we consider all 
information that is relevant to our finding about whether your 
impairment(s) medically equals the criteria of a listing. In Hickman v. 
Apfel, 187 F.3d 683 (7th Cir. 1999), the Court of Appeals interpreted 
our statement in current Sec.  416.926(b) that ``[w]e will always base 
our decision about whether your impairment(s) is medically equal to a 
listed impairment on medical evidence only'' differently from what we 
intended. The Hickman court held that this provision means that we can 
use evidence only from medical sources when we make findings about 
medical equivalence. However, we intend the phrase ``medical evidence 
only'' in this regulation section only to exclude consideration of the 
vocational factors of age, education, and work experience, as defined 
in a number of our regulations. See, for example, Sec. Sec.  
404.1501(g), 404.1505, 404.1520(g), and 404.1560(c)(1) in part 404, and 
Sec. Sec.  416.901(j), 416.905, 416.920(g), and 416.960(c)(1) in part 
416 of our regulations. Under our interpretation of our regulations, 
the phrase ``medical evidence'' includes not just findings reported by 
medical sources but other information about your medical condition(s) 
and its effects, including your own description of your impairment(s).
    The Hickman court believed that when we amended the regulations in 
1997 to add Sec.  416.926(b) we added a rule that ``explicitly 
eliminates any recourse to non-medical evidence.'' Hickman, 187 F.3d at 
688. However, as we have already noted in the above quotes from the 
preamble to the 1997 interim final regulations, we stated in that 
preamble that this was not our intent. Thus, the court's decision 
interpreted the language of our regulations more narrowly than we 
intended.
    Because of this, we issued AR 00-2(7) to implement the Court of 
Appeals' holding within the States in the Seventh Circuit. 65 FR 25783 
(2000). In the AR, we stated that we intended to clarify the language 
at issue in Hickman at Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 416.926 through the 
issuance of a regulatory change and that we might rescind the AR once 
we clarified the regulations. 65 FR at 25785. Likewise, when we 
published the final rules for evaluating disability in children on 
September 11, 2000, we indicated in response to comments that we 
planned to revise Sec.  404.1526 to clarify this issue in response to 
Hickman. 65 FR at 54768. We are now proposing to clarify our 
longstanding interpretation of the regulations in response to the 
Hickman decision.

When Will We Start To Use These Proposed Rules?

    We will not use these proposed rules until we evaluate the public 
comments we receive on them, determine whether they should be issued as 
final rules, and issue final rules in the Federal Register. If we 
publish final rules, we will explain in the preamble how we will apply 
them, and summarize and respond to the public comments. Until the 
effective date of any final rules, we will continue to use our current 
rules.

What Revisions Are We Proposing?

Section 404.1526 Medical Equivalence

Section 416.926 Medical Equivalence for Adults and Children

    We propose to revise Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 416.926 so that they 
use the same language. We also propose to revise these sections to 
clarify that we consider all relevant evidence in your case record when 
we make a finding about whether your impairment or combination of 
impairments medically equals a listing. The specific proposals are as 
follows.
    We propose to replace all of the headings with questions, to revise 
text to put it into active voice and use simpler language where 
possible, and to reorganize text and provide more subparagraphs for 
ease of reading.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1526(a) and 416.926(a)--``What is medical 
equivalence?''--correspond to the first sentence of current Sec.  
416.926(a)--``How medical equivalence is determined.'' They provide a 
basic definition of medical equivalence.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1526(b) and 416.926(b)--``How do we 
determine medical equivalence?''--correspond to the last sentence of 
current Sec.  416.926(a) and the provisions of current Sec. Sec.  
416.926(a)(1) and (a)(2). Throughout these proposed sections, we 
propose to remove the word ``medical'' from the phrase ``medical 
findings'' to help clarify that we consider all relevant information 
when we determine whether your impairment(s) medically equals the 
requirements of a listing.
    We are also proposing new Sec. Sec.  404.1526(b)(4) and 
416.926(b)(4) to provide cross-references to Sec. Sec.  404.1529(d)(3) 
and 416.929(d)(3). Those sections explain how we consider symptoms when 
we make findings about medical equivalence.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1526(c) and 416.926(c)--``What evidence do 
we consider when we determine if your impairment(s) medically equals a 
listing?''--correspond to current Sec. Sec.  404.1526(b) and 416.926(b) 
and the third sentence of current Sec.  416.926(a). In these proposed 
sections, we clarify that we consider all evidence in your case record 
about your impairment(s) and its effects on you that is relevant to our 
finding whether your impairment(s) medically equals a listing. We also 
explain that this means only that we do not consider your vocational 
factors of age, education, and work experience. The last sentence of 
proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1526(c) and 416.926(c) corresponds to the last 
sentence of Sec. Sec.  404.1526(b) and 416.926(b). We are proposing 
minor editorial changes to the language of that sentence, including the 
deletion of the word ``medical'' from the phrase ``medical opinion.'' 
Under Sec. Sec.  404.1527(a) and 416.927(a) of our regulations, the 
term ``medical opinion'' has a specific meaning that does not include 
opinions about medical equivalence. This proposed change will only 
update the language of Sec. Sec.  404.1526(b) and 416.926(b) to match 
our other rules.
    Because we are proposing to add new Sec. Sec.  404.1526(c) and 
416.926(c), we would redesignate current Sec. Sec.  404.1526(c) and 
416.926(c) as Sec. Sec.  404.1526(d) and 416.926(d). These paragraphs 
explain who we consider to be designated medical and psychological 
consultants for purposes of determining medical equivalence. We propose 
only a minor editorial correction to the heading of current paragraph 
(c) (proposed paragraph (d)): the addition of a question mark.
    We would also redesignate current Sec.  416.926(d) as Sec.  
416.926(e) because of the addition of proposed new Sec.  416.926(c). 
This paragraph explains who is responsible for determining medical 
equivalence at each level of the administrative review process. We 
propose a minor correction to the second sentence to reflect our 
current organization. The current sentence refers to ``the Associate 
Commissioner for Disability.'' This reference is out of date because we 
no longer have an organization called the Office of Disability. The 
appropriate reference is now to ``the Associate Commissioner for 
Disability Determinations.'' For an

[[Page 35191]]

explanation of the reorganization that resulted in this change, see 67 
FR 69287 (November 15, 2002). (For similar reasons, we are proposing to 
replace the title ``Director of the Office of Disability Hearings'' 
with the title ``Associate Commissioner for Disability Determinations'' 
in a number of our rules in subpart J of part 404 and subpart N of part 
416 to update those rules as well. We are also making a minor revision 
in the heading of this paragraph.)
    Section 404.1526 does not currently include a provision analogous 
to current Sec.  416.926(d) (proposed Sec.  416.926(e)), so we propose 
to add Sec.  404.1526(e) to make Sec.  404.1526 the same as proposed 
Sec.  416.926.

What Other Revisions Are We Proposing?

Section 404.1525 Listing of Impairments in Appendix 1

Section 416.925 Listing of Impairments in Appendix 1 of Subpart P of 
Part 404 of This Chapter

    We propose to update and clarify these sections, which describe the 
listings and how we use them. As in proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 
416.926, we propose to replace all of the headings with questions, to 
delete the word ``medical'' from the phrase ``medical criteria,'' to 
revise text to put it into active voice and into simpler language where 
possible, and to reorganize text and provide more subparagraphs for 
ease of reading. We also propose to explain better how we organize 
listings sections and to provide an explanation of what it means to 
``meet'' a listing.
    We are also proposing to update our descriptions of the part B 
listings to reflect the current listings. As we explain below, some of 
the current provisions regarding the part B listings date back to 1977 
and no longer accurately describe the content of those listings. 
Finally, we propose to move the provisions on symptoms as they pertain 
to meeting the listings to Sec. Sec.  404.1529 and 416.929, our rules 
on evaluating symptoms, and to delete a provision that is unnecessary 
because it is redundant of other rules.
    The following is a summary of the major changes we are proposing in 
Sec. Sec.  404.1525 and 416.925.
    We propose to move the discussion of duration in the last two 
sentences of current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(a) and 416.925(a) to proposed 
Sec. Sec.  404.1525(c) and 416.925(c), where we discuss how we use the 
listings.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1525(b) and 416.925(b)--``How is appendix 1 
organized?''-- correspond to current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(b) and 
416.925(b). They explain that the listings are in two parts: part A, 
which is primarily for adults, and part B, which is only for children. 
In paragraph (b)(2), the paragraph that describes part B of the 
listings, we propose to delete language that is out of date and no 
longer necessary.
    When we originally published the part B listings for children in 
1977, we intended them to supplement the part A listings. In the 
preamble to the publication of the part B listings, we explained that 
we originally developed the part A listings primarily for determining 
disability in adults. We indicated that a number of the listings for 
adults at that time were appropriate for evaluating disability in 
children too, but that there were also some listings that were not 
appropriate because certain listed impairments had different effects in 
children. We also noted that there were some diseases and other 
impairments in young children that were not addressed in the adult 
listings. Therefore, we published the part B listings, which we 
referred to as ``additional criteria.'' See 42 FR 14705 (March 16, 
1977). The regulation at that time stated:

    Part B is used where the criteria in Part A do not give 
appropriate consideration to the particular effects of disease 
processes in childhood; i.e., when the disease process is generally 
found only in children or when the disease process differs in its 
effect on children than on adults. Where additional criteria are 
included in Part B, the impairment categories are, to the extent 
feasible, numbered to maintain a relationship with their 
counterparts in Part A. The method for adjudicating claims for 
children under age 18 is to look first to Part B. Where the medical 
criteria in Part B are not applicable, the medical criteria in Part 
A should be used.

20 CFR 416.906 (1977). (In 1977, we published the childhood listings 
and the regulation that explained them only in subpart I of part 416 of 
our regulations. In 1980, we changed to the current version of our 
rules, in which we publish both the child and adult listings only in 
appendix 1 of subpart P of part 404 of our regulations and provide 
explanations of the listings in both Sec. Sec.  404.1525 and 416.925. 
(45 FR 55566, August 20, 1980.))
    With minor editorial changes, the corresponding language of the 
current rules in Sec. Sec.  404.1525(b)(2) and 416.925(b)(2) is 
essentially the same as the language that we first published. However, 
since we originally published the listings, we have greatly expanded 
the childhood listings in part B so that it is no longer appropriate to 
speak of them as a supplement to the part A listings. To the contrary, 
the part B listings are for the most part stand-alone; that is, in 
addition to listings that are specifically for children and with 
relatively few exceptions, they include the same listings as part A 
when those listings are applicable to both adults and children. 
Although it is still appropriate in claims of children to refer to 
certain listings in part A when the part B listings do not apply, the 
current relationship of part A to part B is the opposite of what it was 
when we first published the part B listings in 1977. For children, the 
primary listings are in part B, and we may use certain part A listings 
in addition to the part B listings.
    We believe that the language in the first three sentences of 
current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(b)(2) and 416.925(b)(2) is not only out of 
date but also unnecessary. We first published it (and the part B 
listings) to provide rules for adjudicating claims of children under 
the SSI program when that program was still relatively young. Rules 
explaining the relationship between part A and the new part B were 
helpful in those early years, but we believe that we do not need this 
kind of explanation in our regulations anymore. They do not provide 
rules for adjudication or guidelines for our adjudicators to follow 
when they determine disability in children under the listings, and we 
do not believe that they provide information that is especially helpful 
to public understanding of our rules.
    Therefore, we propose to delete most of the language in the first 
three sentences of current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(b)(2) and 416.925(b)(2). 
We propose to clarify in the third sentence of proposed Sec. Sec.  
404.1525(b)(2) and 416.925(b)(2)(i) that, if the criteria in part B do 
not apply, we may use the criteria in part A when those criteria give 
appropriate consideration to the effects of the impairment(s) in 
children. This is a more accurate statement of how we now use the part 
A listings in childhood claims. In the fourth sentence of the proposed 
rules, we propose to retain the provision in the third sentence of the 
current rules that explains that, to the extent possible, we number the 
provisions in part B to maintain a relationship with part A. We propose 
to retain this statement in our rules because there are still some body 
systems in part B in which the listings are not numbered consecutively 
because of this relationship, and this provision will continue to 
answer questions about why some listings in part B are not 
consecutively numbered.
    In the current rules, Sec.  416.925(b)(2) is longer than Sec.  
404.1525(b)(2). This is because the paragraph in part 416

[[Page 35192]]

includes rules about our definition of the phrase ``listing-level 
severity,'' which we use when we evaluate claims of children seeking 
SSI payments based on disability under title XVI of the Act. We do not 
propose any substantive changes to this language, but we are proposing 
minor editorial changes in proposed Sec.  416.925(b)(2)(ii). None of 
these revisions would be a substantive change in our rules.
     First, because the current paragraph is long, we propose 
to divide it into two subparagraphs. Proposed Sec.  416.925(b)(2)(i) 
would be the same as proposed Sec.  404.1525(b)(2). Proposed Sec.  
416.925(b)(2)(ii) would contain the provisions unique to part 416 that 
now start at the sixth sentence of current Sec.  416.925(b)(2).
     Second, the current section refers to both ``domains of 
functioning'' and ``broad areas of functioning.'' These terms are 
synonymous in our rules; however, we currently use the phrase ``domains 
of functioning'' more frequently. Therefore, in the proposed rules, we 
propose to change the phrase ``broad areas of functioning'' to 
``domains of functioning'' for consistency of language within the 
rules.
     Third, in the current rules, we inadvertently refer 
inconsistently to both ``extreme limitations'' and ``extreme 
limitation'' in a domain as a standard of listing-level severity. We 
are correcting this inconsistency by changing the word ``limitations'' 
to ``limitation'' consistent with the standards in our other rules; 
see, for example, Sec.  416.926a(a).
     Finally, we are deleting a duplicate cross-reference to 
Sec.  416.926a. We inadvertently included the same parenthetical cross-
reference to the definitions of the terms ``marked'' and ``extreme'' in 
the seventh and ninth sentences of current Sec.  416.925(b). We propose 
to delete the second reference.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1525(c) and 416.925(c)--``How do we use the 
listings?''-- correspond to current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(c) and 
416.925(c). We propose to break up the current paragraph into shorter 
subparagraphs and to make editorial changes for clarity. In the second 
sentence of proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1525(c)(2) and 416.925(c)(2), we 
propose to expand and clarify the second sentence of current Sec. Sec.  
404.1525(c) and 416.925(c). The proposed rules would clarify that we 
sometimes provide information in the introductory section of each body 
system that is necessary to show whether your impairment meets the 
criteria of a particular listing, not just to establish a diagnosis or 
the existence of a medically determinable impairment. For example, to 
meet most musculoskeletal listings, you must show that you have either 
an ``inability to ambulate effectively'' or an ``inability to perform 
fine and gross movements effectively.'' We define these severity terms 
from the individual musculoskeletal listings in the introductory text 
of the musculoskeletal body system, in section 1.00B2 for adults and 
101.00B2 for children. Likewise, to meet listings 12.05 and 112.05, you 
must have mental retardation that satisfies the criteria in the 
introductory paragraph of those listings (the so-called capsule 
definition) in addition to the criteria in one of the paragraphs that 
follows the capsule definition; that is, listing 12.05A, B, C, or D for 
adults or 112.05A, B, C, D, or E for children. We explain this 
requirement for meeting listings 12.05 and 112.05 in the fourth 
paragraph of section 12.00A for adults and the eighth paragraph of 
section 112.00A for children.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1525(c)(3) and 416.925(c)(3) correspond to 
the next-to-last sentence of current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(c) and 
416.925(c). However, we propose to expand the information and to 
clarify it to define what we mean when we say that your impairment 
``meets'' the requirements of a listing. We propose to delete the 
explanation in the next-to-last sentence of the current rules that the 
required level of severity in a listing is shown by ``one or more sets 
of medical findings'' and to delete the last sentence, which says that 
the medical findings ``consist of symptoms, signs, and laboratory 
findings.'' These descriptions of our listings are no longer accurate. 
For many years, we have had listings that also include functional 
criteria. Further, we have a number of listings that do not include 
symptoms, signs, and laboratory findings in their criteria. We do not 
propose to replace the current sentences because we believe that the 
proposed rules would be clear enough without a detailed description of 
all the possible kinds of criteria a given listing might contain. 
Instead, we simply provide that your impairment(s) meets the 
requirements of a listing when it satisfies all of the criteria of that 
listing, including any relevant criteria in the introduction to the 
body system, and meets the duration requirement.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1525(c)(4) and 416.925(c)(4) correspond to 
the last two sentences of current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(a) and 
416.925(a). In the current rules, these sentences explain that

[m]ost of the listed impairments are permanent or expected to result 
in death, or a specific statement of duration is made. For all 
others, the evidence must show that the impairment has lasted or is 
expected to last for a continuous period of at least 12 months.

    We propose to move this language to the section of the proposed 
rules in which we explain how we decide whether your impairment(s) 
meets a listing because it is most relevant to that finding. We also 
propose to explain better what we mean by the statement ``or a specific 
statement of duration is made'' in our current rules. We mean by this 
that in some listings we say that we will find that your impairment(s) 
will meet the listing for a specific period of time. For example, in 
listings 13.06A and 113.06A, acute leukemia, we state that we will find 
that your impairment is disabling until at least 24 months from the 
date of diagnosis or relapse or at least 12 months from the date of the 
bone marrow or stem cell transplantation, whichever is later. 
Thereafter, we will evaluate any residual impairment under the criteria 
for the affected body systems. (For current listings 13.06 and 113.06, 
see 69 FR 67018, at 67034 and 67037 (November 15, 2004).)
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  404.1525(c)(5) and 416.925(c)(5) are new. They 
explain that when your impairment(s) does not meet a listing, it can 
``medically equal'' the criteria of a listing, and provide a cross-
reference to Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 416.926, our rules on medical 
equivalence. They also explain that when your impairment(s) does not 
meet or medically equal a listing we may find you disabled at a later 
step in the sequential evaluation process. We do not specify the step 
in the process at which we may find you disabled or still disabled 
because there are different sequential evaluation processes for adults 
and children who file initial claims and for continuing disability 
reviews of adults and children.
    We propose to remove current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(e) and 416.925(e) 
because they are redundant, and we have more recent rules. Our policy 
on how we consider drug addiction and alcoholism is in Sec. Sec.  
404.1535 and 416.935, which we published in 1995. See 60 FR 8140, at 
8147 (February 10, 1995).
    Because of this deletion, we would redesignate Sec. Sec.  
404.1525(f) and 416.925(f) as Sec. Sec.  404.1525(e) and 416.925(e). We 
also propose to simplify these sections and to make our regulations on 
the evaluation of symptoms more consistent by exchanging the provisions 
in current Sec. Sec.  404.1525(f) and 416.925(f) (proposed Sec. Sec.  
404.1525(e) and 416.925(e)) with the

[[Page 35193]]

provisions of Sec. Sec.  404.1529(d)(2) and 416.929(d)(2). In current 
Sec. Sec.  404.1529(d) and 416.929(d), we explain how we consider your 
symptoms (such as pain) at each step of the sequential evaluation 
process. For example, in paragraph (d)(1) we explain how we consider 
your symptoms when we determine if your impairment(s) is ``severe,'' 
and in paragraph (d)(3) we explain how we consider your symptoms when 
we determine if your impairment(s) medically equals a listing. However, 
in paragraph (d)(2), instead of explaining how we consider your 
symptoms when we determine if your impairment meets a listing, we 
currently provide only a cross-reference to Sec. Sec.  404.1525(f) and 
416.925(f), where we explain our policy on symptoms and meeting 
listings.
    We believe that it would be more consistent to move our explanation 
of our policy on symptoms and meeting listings now in current 
Sec. Sec.  404.1525(f) and 416.925(f) to Sec. Sec.  404.1529(d)(2) and 
416.929(d)(2) so that it is together with our explanations of how we 
consider symptoms at other steps in the sequential evaluation process. 
However, instead of removing the sections, we would in their place 
insert a cross-reference to Sec. Sec.  404.1529(d)(2) and 416.929(d)(2) 
to ensure that our adjudicators refer to the policy. As we have already 
noted, we propose to add similar new Sec. Sec.  404.1526(b)(4) and 
416.926(b)(4) to provide cross-references to Sec. Sec.  404.1529(d)(3) 
and 416.929(d)(3) to refer to our rules for considering medical 
equivalence.

Sections 404.1528 and 416.928 Symptoms, Signs, and Laboratory Findings

    We propose to delete the opening statement of these sections, which 
says that ``[m]edical findings consist of symptoms, signs, and 
laboratory findings.'' We believe that the statement is unnecessary and 
that deleting it would help to remove any confusion about the evidence 
we consider wherever we use ``medical findings'' in our rules.

Sections 404.1529 and 416.929 How We Evaluate Symptoms, Including Pain

    As we have already explained, we propose to replace Sec. Sec.  
404.1529(d)(2) and 416.929(d)(2) with the text of current Sec. Sec.  
404.1525(f) and 416.925(f). Except for minor editorial revisions, the 
language is unchanged.
    We propose to add the word ``medically'' to the heading of 
Sec. Sec.  404.1529(d)(3) and 416.929(d)(3) so that they read 
``Decision whether the Listing of Impairments is medically equaled.'' 
We also propose to revise the third sentence in those sections, for 
conformity with the proposed changes in Sec. Sec.  404.1526 and 
416.926, to indicate that we will base a finding of medical equivalence 
on all evidence in the case record and its effect on the individual.
    We propose to make a number of minor editorial changes throughout 
Sec. Sec.  404.1529 and 416.929 to update them to match our current 
rules. For example, throughout these sections we are changing 
references to ``your treating or examining physician or psychologist'' 
to ``your treating or nontreating source.'' This change would update 
the rules to match the terms we now use in Sec. Sec.  404.1502 and 
416.902 and our other rules that refer to medical sources; it does not 
change the meaning of the sentence. We are also correcting a cross-
reference in the second sentence of Sec. Sec.  404.1529(a) and 
416.929(a) to reflect our current rules.

Clarity of These Proposed Rules

    Executive Order 12866, as amended by Executive Order 13258, 
requires each agency to write all rules in plain language. In addition 
to your substantive comments on these proposed rules, we invite your 
comments on how to make these proposed rules easier to understand. For 
example:
     Have we organized the material to suit your needs?
     Are the requirements in the rules clearly stated?
     Do the rules contain technical language or jargon that 
isn't clear?
     Would a different format (grouping and order of sections, 
use of headings, paragraphing) make the rules easier to understand?
     Would more (but shorter) sections be better?
     Could we improve clarity by adding tables, lists, or 
diagrams?
     What else could we do to make the rules easier to 
understand?

Regulatory Procedures

Executive Order 12866

    We have consulted with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
and determined that these proposed rules meet the criteria for a 
significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866, as amended 
by Executive Order 13258. Thus, they were reviewed by OMB.

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    We certify that these proposed rules would not have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities because they 
would affect only individuals. Thus, a regulatory flexibility analysis 
as provided in the Regulatory Flexibility Act, as amended, is not 
required.

Paperwork Reduction Act

    These proposed rules contain reporting requirements as shown in the 
following table.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                      Average
                                                  Annual  number   Frequency of     burden per       Estimated
                     Section                       of  responses     response        response      annual burden
                                                                                      (min.)        \1\  (hrs.)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
404.918(d)......................................            1932               1              60            1932
416.1418(d).....................................            7268               1              60            7268
                                                 -----------------
    Total.......................................            9200               1              60           9200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The annual burden is an estimate. We do not have management information about (1) the number of
  predecisional notices sent, (2) the number of individuals who actually avail themselves of the opportunity to
  provide additional information, or (3) the percentage of cases that result in a changed decision because
  individuals respond.

    An Information Collection Request has been submitted to OMB for 
clearance. We are soliciting comments on the burden estimate; the need 
for the information; its practical utility; ways to enhance its 
quality, utility and clarity; and on ways to minimize the burden on 
respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or 
other forms of information technology. Comments should be submitted 
and/or faxed to the Office of Management and Budget at the following 
address/number: Office of Management and Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for 
SSA, Fax Number: 202-395-6974.
    Comments can be received for up to 60 days after publication of 
this notice

[[Page 35194]]

and will be most useful if received within 30 days of publication. To 
receive a copy of the OMB clearance package, you may call the SSA 
Reports Clearance Officer on 410-965-0454.

(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program Nos. 96.001, Social 
Security-Disability Insurance; 96.002, Social Security-Retirement 
Insurance; 96.004, Social Security-Survivors Insurance; and 96.006, 
Supplemental Security Income)

List of Subjects

20 CFR Part 404

    Administrative practice and procedure, Blind, Disability benefits, 
Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance, Reporting and 
recordkeeping requirements, Social Security.

20 CFR Part 416

    Administrative practice and procedure, Aged, Blind, Disability 
benefits, Public assistance programs, Reporting and recordkeeping 
requirements, Supplemental Security Income (SSI).

    Dated: March 15, 2005.
Jo Anne B. Barnhart,
Commissioner of Social Security.
    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, we propose to amend 
subparts J and P of part 404 and subparts I and N of part 416 of 
chapter III of title 20 of the Code of Federal Regulations as set forth 
below:

PART 404--FEDERAL OLD-AGE, SURVIVORS AND DISABILITY INSURANCE 
(1950-)

Subpart J--[Amended]

    1. The authority citation for subpart J of part 404 continues to 
read as follows:

    Authority: Secs. 201(j), 204(f), 205(a), (b), (d)-(h), and (j), 
221, 225, and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 
401(j), 404(f), 405(a), (b), (d)-(h), and (j), 421, 425, and 
902(a)(5)); sec. 5, Pub. L. 97-455, 96 Stat. 2500 (42 U.S.C. 405 
note); secs. 5, 6(c)-(e), and 15, Pub. L. 98-460, 98 Stat. 1802 (42 
U.S.C. 421 note).

    2. Section 404.914 is amended by revising the first sentence of 
paragraph (c)(1) to read as follows:


Sec.  404.914  Disability hearing--general.

* * * * *
    (c) Time and place--(1) General. Either the State agency or the 
Associate Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her 
delegate, as appropriate, will set the time and place of your 
disability hearing. * * *
* * * * *
    3. Section 404.915 is amended by revising the second sentence of 
paragraph (a) and paragraph (c) introductory text to read as follows:


Sec.  404.915  Disability hearing--disability hearing officers.

    (a) General. * * * The disability hearing officer will be an 
experienced disability examiner, regardless of whether he or she is 
appointed by a State agency or by the Associate Commissioner for 
Disability Determinations or his or her delegate, as described in 
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
* * * * *
    (c) Federal hearing officers. The disability hearing officer who 
conducts your disability hearing will be appointed by the Associate 
Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate if:
* * * * *
    4. Section 404.917 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  404.917  Disability hearing--disability hearing officer's 
reconsidered determination.

* * * * *
    (d) Effect. The disability hearing officer's reconsidered 
determination, or, if it is changed under Sec.  404.918, the 
reconsidered determination that is issued by the Associate Commissioner 
for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate, is binding in 
accordance with Sec.  404.921, subject to the exceptions specified in 
that section.
    5. Section 404.918 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  404.918  Disability hearing--review of the disability hearing 
officer's reconsidered determination before it is issued.

    (a) General. The Associate Commissioner for Disability 
Determinations or his or her delegate may select a sample of disability 
hearing officers' reconsidered determinations, before they are issued, 
and review any such case to determine its correctness on any grounds he 
or she deems appropriate. The Associate Commissioner or his or her 
delegate shall review any case within the sample if:
    (1) There appears to be an abuse of discretion by the hearing 
officer;
    (2) There is an error of law; or
    (3) The action, findings or conclusions of the disability hearing 
officer are not supported by substantial evidence.

    Note to paragraph (a): If the review indicates that the 
reconsidered determination prepared by the disability hearing 
officer is correct, it will be dated and issued immediately upon 
completion of the review. If the reconsidered determination prepared 
by the disability hearing officer is found by the Associate 
Commissioner or his or her delegate to be deficient, it will be 
changed as described in paragraph (b) of this section.

    (b) Methods of correcting deficiencies in the disability hearing 
officer's reconsidered determination. If the reconsidered determination 
prepared by the disability hearing officer is found by the Associate 
Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate to be 
deficient, the Associate Commissioner or his or her delegate will take 
appropriate action to assure that the deficiency is corrected before a 
reconsidered determination is issued. The action taken by the Associate 
Commissioner or his or her delegate will take one of two forms:
    (1) The Associate Commissioner or his or her delegate may return 
the case file either to the component responsible for preparing the 
case for hearing or to the disability hearing officer, for appropriate 
further action; or
    (2) The Associate Commissioner or his or her delegate may issue a 
written reconsidered determination which corrects the deficiency.
    (c) Further action on your case if it is sent back by the Associate 
Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate 
either to the component that prepared your case for hearing or to the 
disability hearing officer. If the Associate Commissioner for 
Disability Determinations or his or her delegate sends your case back 
either to the component responsible for preparing the case for hearing 
or to the disability hearing officer for appropriate further action, as 
provided in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, any additional 
proceedings in your case will be governed by the disability hearing 
procedures described in Sec.  404.916(f) or if your case is returned to 
the disability hearing officer and an unfavorable determination is 
indicated, a supplementary hearing may be scheduled for you before a 
reconsidered determination is reached in your case.
    (d) Opportunity to comment before the Associate Commissioner for 
Disability Determinations or his or her delegate issues a reconsidered 
determination that is unfavorable to you. If the Associate Commissioner 
for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate proposes to issue 
a reconsidered determination as described in paragraph (b)(2) of this 
section, and that reconsidered determination is unfavorable to you, he 
or she will send you a copy of the proposed reconsidered determination 
with an explanation of the reasons for it, and will give you an

[[Page 35195]]

opportunity to submit written comments before it is issued. At your 
request, you will also be given an opportunity to inspect the pertinent 
materials in your case file, including the reconsidered determination 
prepared by the disability hearing officer, before submitting your 
comments. You will be given 10 days from the date you receive the 
Associate Commissioner's notice of proposed action to submit your 
written comments, unless additional time is necessary to provide access 
to the pertinent file materials or there is good cause for providing 
more time, as illustrated by the examples in Sec.  404.911(b). The 
Associate Commissioner or his or her delegate will consider your 
comments before taking any further action on your case.

Subpart P--[Amended]

    6. The authority citation for subpart P of part 404 continues to 
read as follows:

    Authority: Secs. 202, 205(a), (b), and (d)-(h), 216(i), 221(a) 
and (i), 222(c), 223, 225, and 702(a) (5) of the Social Security Act 
(42 U.S.C. 402, 405(a), (b), and (d)-(h), 416(i), 421(a) and (i), 
422(c), 423, 425, and 902(a) (5)); sec. 211(b), Pub. L. 104-193, 110 
Stat. 2105, 2189.

    7. Section 404.1525 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  404.1525  Listing of Impairments in appendix 1.

    (a) What is the purpose of the Listing of Impairments? The Listing 
of Impairments (the listings) is in appendix 1 of this subpart. It 
describes for each of the major body systems impairments that we 
consider to be severe enough to prevent an individual from doing any 
gainful activity, regardless of his or her age, education, or work 
experience.
    (b) How is appendix 1 organized? There are two parts in appendix 1:
    (1) Part A contains criteria that apply to individuals age 18 and 
over. We may also use part A for individuals who are under age 18 if 
the disease processes have a similar effect on adults and children.
    (2) Part B contains criteria that apply only to individuals who are 
under age 18; we never use the listings in part B to evaluate 
individuals who are age 18 or older. In evaluating disability for a 
person under age 18, we use part B first. If the criteria in part B do 
not apply, we may use the criteria in part A when those criteria give 
appropriate consideration to the effects of the impairment(s) in 
children. To the extent possible, we number the provisions in part B to 
maintain a relationship with their counterparts in part A.
    (c) How do we use the listings? (1) Each body system section in 
parts A and B of appendix 1 is in two parts: an introduction, followed 
by the specific listings.
    (2) The introduction to each body system contains information 
relevant to the use of the listings in that body system; for example, 
examples of common impairments in the body system and definitions used 
in the listings for that body system. We may also include specific 
criteria for establishing a diagnosis, confirming the existence of an 
impairment, or establishing that your impairment(s) satisfies the 
criteria of a particular listing in the body system. Even if we do not 
include specific criteria for establishing a diagnosis or confirming 
the existence of your impairment, you must still show that you have a 
severe medically determinable impairment(s), as defined in Sec. Sec.  
404.1508 and 404.1520(c).
    (3) The specific listings follow the introduction in each body 
system, after the heading, Category of Impairments. Within each 
listing, we specify the objective medical and other findings needed to 
satisfy the criteria of that listing. We will find that your 
impairment(s) meets the requirements of a listing when it satisfies all 
of the criteria of that listing, including any relevant criteria in the 
introduction, and meets the duration requirement (see Sec.  404.1509).
    (4) Most of the listed impairments are permanent or expected to 
result in death. For some listings, we state a specific period of time 
for which your impairment(s) will meet the listing. For all others, the 
evidence must show that your impairment(s) has lasted or can be 
expected to last for a continuous period of at least 12 months.
    (5) If your impairment(s) does not meet the criteria of a listing, 
it can medically equal the criteria of a listing. We explain our rules 
for medical equivalence in Sec.  404.1526. We use the listings only to 
find that you are disabled or still disabled. If your impairment(s) 
does not meet or medically equal the criteria of a listing, we may find 
that you are disabled or still disabled at a later step in the 
sequential evaluation process.
    (d) Can your impairment(s) meet a listing based only on a 
diagnosis? No. Your impairment(s) cannot meet the criteria of a listing 
based only on a diagnosis. To meet the requirements of a listing, you 
must have a medically determinable impairment(s) that satisfies all of 
the criteria in the listing.
    (e) How do we consider your symptoms when we determine whether your 
impairment(s) meets a listing? Some listed impairments include 
symptoms, such as pain, as criteria. Section 404.1529(d)(2) explains 
how we consider your symptoms when your symptoms are included as 
criteria in a listing.
    8. Section 404.1526 is amended by revising paragraphs (a) and (b), 
revising the heading of paragraph (c) and redesignating paragraph (c) 
as paragraph (d), and adding new paragraphs (c) and (e), to read as 
follows:


Sec.  404.1526  Medical equivalence.

    (a) What is medical equivalence? Your impairment(s) is medically 
equivalent to a listed impairment in appendix 1 if it is at least equal 
in severity and duration to the criteria of any listed impairment.
    (b) How do we determine medical equivalence? We can find medical 
equivalence in three ways.
    (1)(i) If you have an impairment that is described in appendix 1, 
but--
    (A) You do not exhibit one or more of the findings specified in the 
particular listing, or
    (B) You exhibit all of the findings, but one or more of the 
findings is not as severe as specified in the particular listing,
    (ii) We will find that your impairment is medically equivalent to 
that listing if you have other findings related to your impairment that 
are at least of equal medical significance to the required criteria.
    (2) If you have an impairment(s) that is not described in appendix 
1, we will compare your findings with those for closely analogous 
listed impairments. If the findings related to your impairment(s) are 
at least of equal medical significance to those of a listed impairment, 
we will find that your impairment(s) is medically equivalent to the 
analogous listing.
    (3) If you have a combination of impairments, no one of which meets 
a listing (see Sec.  404.1525(c)(3)), we will compare your findings 
with those for closely analogous listed impairments. If the findings 
related to your impairments are at least of equal medical significance 
to those of a listed impairment, we will find that your combination of 
impairments is medically equivalent to that listing.
    (4) Section 404.1529(d)(3) explains how we consider your symptoms, 
such as pain, when we make findings about medical equivalence.
    (c) What evidence do we consider when we determine if your 
impairment(s) medically equals a listing? When we determine if your 
impairment medically equals a listing, we consider all evidence in your 
case

[[Page 35196]]

record about your impairment(s) and its effects on you that is relevant 
to this finding. We do not consider your vocational factors of age, 
education, and work experience (see, for example, Sec.  
404.1560(c)(1)). We also consider the opinion given by one or more 
medical or psychological consultants designated by the Commissioner. 
(See Sec.  404.1616.)
    (d) Who is a designated medical or psychological consultant? * * *
    (e) Who is responsible for determining medical equivalence? In 
cases where the State agency or other designee of the Commissioner 
makes the initial or reconsideration disability determination, a State 
agency medical or psychological consultant or other designee of the 
Commissioner (see Sec.  404.1616) has the overall responsibility for 
determining medical equivalence. For cases in the disability hearing 
process or otherwise decided by a disability hearing officer, the 
responsibility for determining medical equivalence rests with either 
the disability hearing officer or, if the disability hearing officer's 
reconsideration determination is changed under Sec.  404.918, with the 
Associate Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her 
delegate. For cases at the Administrative Law Judge or Appeals Council 
level, the responsibility for deciding medical equivalence rests with 
the Administrative Law Judge or Appeals Council.


Sec.  404.1528  [Amended]

    9. Section 404.1528 is amended by removing the introductory text 
before paragraph (a).
    10. Section 404.1529 is amended by revising the third, fourth, and 
fifth sentences in paragraph (a), the fifth sentence in paragraph (b), 
the second sentence in paragraph (c)(1), the second, third, and fourth 
sentences in paragraph (c)(3), the third sentence in paragraph (c)(4), 
paragraph (d)(2), and the heading and the third sentence in paragraph 
(d)(3), to read as follows:


Sec.  404.1529  How we evaluate symptoms, including pain.

    (a) General. * * * By other evidence, we mean the kinds of evidence 
described in Sec. Sec.  404.1512(b)(2) through (6) and 404.1513(b)(1), 
(4), and (5), and (d). These include statements or reports from you, 
your treating or nontreating source, and others about your medical 
history, diagnosis, prescribed treatment, daily activities, efforts to 
work, and any other evidence showing how your impairment(s) and any 
related symptoms affect your ability to work. We will consider all of 
your statements about your symptoms, such as pain, and any description 
you, your treating source or nontreating source, or other persons may 
provide about how the symptoms affect your activities of daily living 
and your ability to work. * * *
    (b) Need for medically determinable impairment that could 
reasonably be expected to produce your symptoms, such as pain. * * * At 
the administrative law judge hearing or Appeals Council level, the 
administrative law judge or the Appeals Council may ask for and 
consider the opinion of a medical expert concerning whether your 
impairment(s) could reasonably be expected to produce your alleged 
symptoms. * * *
    (c) Evaluating the intensity and persistence of your symptoms, such 
as pain, and determining the extent to which your symptoms limit your 
capacity for work--(1) General. * * * In evaluating the intensity and 
persistence of your symptoms, we consider all of the available 
evidence, including your history, the signs and laboratory findings, 
and statements from you, your treating or nontreating source, or other 
persons about how your symptoms affect you. * * *
* * * * *
    (3) Consideration of other evidence. * * * The information that 
you, your treating or nontreating source, or other persons provide 
about your pain or other symptoms (e.g., what may precipitate or 
aggravate your symptoms, what medications, treatments or other methods 
you use to alleviate them, and how the symptoms may affect your pattern 
of daily living) is also an important indicator of the intensity and 
persistence of your symptoms. Because symptoms, such as pain, are 
subjective and difficult to quantify, any symptom-related functional 
limitations and restrictions which you, your treating or nontreating 
source, or other persons report, which can reasonably be accepted as 
consistent with the objective medical evidence and other evidence, will 
be taken into account as explained in paragraph (c)(4) of this section 
in reaching a conclusion as to whether you are disabled. We will 
consider all of the evidence presented, including information about 
your prior work record, your statements about your symptoms, evidence 
submitted by your treating or nontreating source, and observations by 
our employees and other persons. * * *
    (4) How we determine the extent to which symptoms, such as pain, 
affect your capacity to perform basic work activities. * * * We will 
consider whether there are any inconsistencies in the evidence and the 
extent to which there are any conflicts between your statements and the 
rest of the evidence, including your history, the signs and laboratory 
findings, and statements by your treating or nontreating source or 
other persons about how your symptoms affect you. * * *
    (d) Consideration of symptoms in the disability determination 
process.
* * * * *
    (2) Decision whether the Listing of Impairments is met. Some listed 
impairments include symptoms usually associated with those impairments 
as criteria. Generally, when a symptom is one of the criteria in a 
listing, it is only necessary that the symptom be present in 
combination with the other criteria. It is not necessary, unless the 
listing specifically states otherwise, to provide information about the 
intensity, persistence, or limiting effects of the symptom as long as 
all other findings required by the specific listing are present.
    (3) Decision whether the Listing of Impairments is medically 
equaled. * * * Under Sec.  404.1526(b), we will consider medical 
equivalence based on all evidence in your case record about your 
impairment(s) and its effects on you that is relevant to this finding. 
* * *
* * * * *

PART 416--SUPPLEMENTAL SECURITY INCOME FOR THE AGED, BLIND, AND 
DISABLED

Subpart I--[Amended]

    11. The authority citation for subpart I of part 416 continues to 
read as follows:

    Authority: Secs. 702(a)(5), 1611, 1614, 1619, 1631(a), (c), and 
(d)(1), and 1633 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 902(a)(5), 
1382, 1382c, 1382h, 1383(a), (c), and (d)(1), and 1383(b); secs. 
4(c) and 5, 6(c)-(e), 14(a), and 15, Pub. L. 98-460, 98 Stat. 1794, 
1801, 1802, and 1808 (42 U.S.C. 421 note, 423 note, 1382h note).

    12. Section 416.925 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  416.925  Listing of Impairments in appendix 1 of subpart P of 
part 404 of this chapter.

    (a) What is the purpose of the Listing of Impairments? The Listing 
of Impairments (the listings) is in appendix 1 of subpart P of part 404 
of this chapter. For adults, it describes for each of the major body 
systems impairments that we consider to be severe enough to prevent an 
individual from doing any gainful activity, regardless of his or her 
age, education,

[[Page 35197]]

or work experience. For children, it describes impairments that cause 
marked and severe functional limitations.
    (b) How is appendix 1 organized? There are two parts in appendix 1:
    (1) Part A contains criteria that apply to individuals age 18 and 
over. We may also use part A for individuals who are under age 18 if 
the disease processes have a similar effect on adults and children.
    (2)(i) Part B contains criteria that apply only to individuals who 
are under age 18; we never use the listings in part B to evaluate 
individuals who are age 18 or older. In evaluating disability for a 
person under age 18, we use part B first. If the criteria in part B do 
not apply, we may use the criteria in part A when those criteria give 
appropriate consideration to the effects of the impairment(s) in 
children. To the extent possible, we number the provisions in part B to 
maintain a relationship with their counterparts in part A.
    (ii) Although the severity criteria in part B of the listings are 
expressed in different ways for different impairments, ``listing-level 
severity'' generally means the level of severity described in Sec.  
416.926a(a); that is, ``marked'' limitations in two domains of 
functioning or an ``extreme'' limitation in one domain. (See Sec.  
416.926a(e) for the definitions of the terms marked and extreme as they 
apply to children.) Therefore, in general, a child's impairment(s) is 
of ``listing-level severity'' if it causes marked limitations in two 
domains of functioning or an extreme limitation in one. However, when 
we decide whether your impairment(s) meets the requirements of a 
listing, we will decide that your impairment is of ``listing-level 
severity'' even if it does not result in marked limitations in two 
domains of functioning, or an extreme limitation in one, if the listing 
that we apply does not require such limitations to establish that an 
impairment(s) is disabling.
    (c) How do we use the listings? (1) Each body system section in 
parts A and B of appendix 1 of subpart P of part 404 of this chapter is 
in two parts: an introduction, followed by the specific listings.
    (2) The introduction to each body system contains information 
relevant to the use of the listings in that body system; for example, 
examples of common impairments in the body system and definitions used 
in the listings for that body system. We may also include specific 
criteria for establishing a diagnosis, confirming the existence of an 
impairment, or establishing that your impairment(s) satisfies the 
criteria of a particular listing in the body system. Even if we do not 
include specific criteria for establishing a diagnosis or confirming 
the existence of your impairment, you must still show that you have a 
severe medically determinable impairment(s), as defined in Sec. Sec.  
416.908, 416.920(c), and 416.924(c).
    (3) The specific listings follow the introduction in each body 
system, after the heading, Category of Impairments. Within each 
listing, we specify the objective medical and other findings needed to 
satisfy the criteria of that listing. We will find that your 
impairment(s) meets the requirements of a listing when it satisfies all 
of the criteria of that listing, including any relevant criteria in the 
introduction, and meets the duration requirement (see Sec.  416.909).
    (4) Most of the listed impairments are permanent or expected to 
result in death. For some listings, we state a specific period of time 
for which your impairment(s) will meet the listing. For all others, the 
evidence must show that your impairment(s) has lasted or can be 
expected to last for a continuous period of at least 12 months.
    (5) If your impairment(s) does not meet the criteria of a listing, 
it can medically equal the criteria of a listing. We explain our rules 
for medical equivalence in Sec.  416.926. We use the listings only to 
find that you are disabled or still disabled. If your impairment(s) 
does not meet or medically equal the criteria of a listing, we may find 
that you are disabled or still disabled at a later step in the 
sequential evaluation process.
    (d) Can your impairment(s) meet a listing based only on a 
diagnosis? No. Your impairment(s) cannot meet the criteria of a listing 
based only on a diagnosis. To meet the requirements of a listing, you 
must have a medically determinable impairment(s) that satisfies all of 
the criteria of the listing.
    (e) How do we consider your symptoms when we determine whether your 
impairment(s) meets a listing? Some listed impairments include 
symptoms, such as pain, as criteria. Section 416.929(d)(2) explains how 
we consider your symptoms when your symptoms are included as criteria 
in a listing.
    13. Section 416.926 is amended by revising paragraphs (a) and (b), 
revising the heading of paragraph (c), revising the heading and the 
second sentence of paragraph (d), redesignating paragraphs (c) and (d) 
as paragraphs (d) and (e), and adding a new paragraph (c) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  416.926  Medical equivalence for adults and children.

    (a) What is medical equivalence? Your impairment(s) is medically 
equivalent to a listed impairment in appendix 1 of subpart P of part 
404 of this chapter if it is at least equal in severity and duration to 
the criteria of any listed impairment.
    (b) How do we determine medical equivalence? We can find medical 
equivalence in three ways.
    (1)(i) If you have an impairment that is described in the Listing 
of Impairments in appendix 1 of subpart P of part 404 of this chapter, 
but--
    (A) You do not exhibit one or more of the findings specified in the 
particular listing, or
    (B) You exhibit all of the findings, but one or more of the 
findings is not as severe as specified in the particular listing,
    (ii) We will find that your impairment is medically equivalent to 
that listing if you have other findings related to your impairment that 
are at least of equal medical significance to the required criteria.
    (2) If you have an impairment(s) that is not described in the 
Listing of Impairments in appendix 1 of subpart P of part 404 of this 
chapter, we will compare your findings with those for closely analogous 
listed impairments. If the findings related to your impairment(s) are 
at least of equal medical significance to those of a listed impairment, 
we will find that your impairment(s) is medically equivalent to the 
analogous listing.
    (3) If you have a combination of impairments, no one of which meets 
a listing described in the Listing of Impairments in appendix 1 of 
subpart P of part 404 of this chapter (see Sec.  416.925(c)(3)), we 
will compare your findings with those for closely analogous listed 
impairments. If the findings related to your impairments are at least 
of equal medical significance to those of a listed impairment, we will 
find that your combination of impairments is medically equivalent to 
that listing.
    (4) Section 416.929(d)(3) explains how we consider your symptoms, 
such as pain, when we make findings about medical equivalence.
    (c) What evidence do we consider when we determine if your 
impairment(s) medically equals a listing? When we determine if your 
impairment medically equals a listing, we consider all evidence in your 
case record about your impairment(s) and its effects on you that is 
relevant to this finding. We do not consider your vocational factors of 
age, education, and

[[Page 35198]]

work experience (see, for example, Sec.  416.960(c)(1)). We also 
consider the opinion given by one or more medical or psychological 
consultants designated by the Commissioner. (See Sec.  416.1016.)
    (d) Who is a designated medical or psychological consultant? * * *
    (e) Who is responsible for determining medical equivalence? * * * 
For cases in the disability hearing process or otherwise decided by a 
disability hearing officer, the responsibility for determining medical 
equivalence rests with either the disability hearing officer or, if the 
disability hearing officer's reconsideration determination is changed 
under Sec.  416.1418, with the Associate Commissioner for Disability 
Determinations or his or her delegate. * * *


Sec.  416.928  [Amended]

    14. Section 416.928 is amended by removing the introductory 
sentence before paragraph (a).
    15. Section 416.929 is amended by revising the third, fourth, and 
fifth sentences in paragraph (a), the fifth sentence in paragraph (b), 
the second sentence in paragraph (c)(1), the second, third, and fourth 
sentences in paragraph (c)(3), the third sentence in paragraph (c)(4), 
paragraph (d)(2), and the third sentence in paragraph (d)(3), to read 
as follows:


Sec.  416.929  How we evaluate symptoms, including pain.

    (a) General. * * * By other evidence, we mean the kinds of evidence 
described in Sec. Sec.  416.912(b)(2) through (6) and 416.913(b)(1), 
(4), and (5), and (d). These include statements or reports from you, 
your treating or nontreating source, and others about your medical 
history, diagnosis, prescribed treatment, daily activities, efforts to 
work, and any other evidence showing how your impairment(s) and any 
related symptoms affect your ability to work (or, if you are a child, 
your functioning). We will consider all of your statements about your 
symptoms, such as pain, and any description you, your treating source 
or nontreating source, or other persons may provide about how the 
symptoms affect your activities of daily living and your ability to 
work (or, if you are a child, your functioning). * * *
    (b) Need for medically determinable impairment that could 
reasonably be expected to produce your symptoms, such as pain. * * * At 
the administrative law judge hearing or Appeals Council level, the 
administrative law judge or the Appeals Council may ask for and 
consider the opinion of a medical expert concerning whether your 
impairment(s) could reasonably be expected to produce your alleged 
symptoms. * * *
    (c) Evaluating the intensity and persistence of your symptoms, such 
as pain, and determining the extent to which your symptoms limit your 
capacity for work or, if you are a child, your functioning--(1) 
General. * * * In evaluating the intensity and persistence of your 
symptoms, we consider all of the available evidence, including your 
history, the signs and laboratory findings, and statements from you, 
your treating or nontreating source, or other persons about how your 
symptoms affect you. * * *
    (3) Consideration of other evidence. * * * The information that 
you, your treating or nontreating source, or other persons provide 
about your pain or other symptoms (e.g., what may precipitate or 
aggravate your symptoms, what medications, treatments or other methods 
you use to alleviate them, and how the symptoms may affect your pattern 
of daily living) is also an important indicator of the intensity and 
persistence of your symptoms. Because symptoms, such as pain, are 
subjective and difficult to quantify, any symptom-related functional 
limitations and restrictions which you, your treating or nontreating 
source, or other persons report, which can reasonably be accepted as 
consistent with the objective medical evidence and other evidence, will 
be taken into account as explained in paragraph (c)(4) of this section 
in reaching a conclusion as to whether you are disabled. We will 
consider all of the evidence presented, including information about 
your prior work record, your statements about your symptoms, evidence 
submitted by your treating or nontreating source, and observations by 
our employees and other persons. * * *
    (4) How we determine the extent to which symptoms, such as pain, 
affect your capacity to perform basic work activities, or if you are a 
child, your functioning. * * * We will consider whether there are any 
inconsistencies in the evidence and the extent to which there are any 
conflicts between your statements and the rest of the evidence, 
including your history, the signs and laboratory findings, and 
statements by your treating or nontreating source or other persons 
about how your symptoms affect you. * * *
* * * * *
    (d) Consideration of symptoms in the disability determination 
process.
* * * * *
    (2) Decision whether the Listing of Impairments is met. Some listed 
impairments include symptoms usually associated with those impairments 
as criteria. Generally, when a symptom is one of the criteria in a 
listing, it is only necessary that the symptom be present in 
combination with the other criteria. It is not necessary, unless the 
listing specifically states otherwise, to provide information about the 
intensity, persistence, or limiting effects of the symptom as long as 
all other findings required by the specific listing are present.
    (3) Decision whether the Listing of Impairments is medically 
equaled. * * * Under Sec.  416.926(b), we will consider medical 
equivalence based on all evidence in your case record about your 
impairment(s) and its effects on you that is relevant to this finding. 
* * *
* * * * *

Subpart N--[Amended]

    16. The authority citation for subpart N of part 416 continues to 
read as follows:

    Authority: Secs. 702(a)(5), 1631, and 1633 of the Social 
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 902(a)(5), 1383, and 1383b).

    17. Section 416.1414 is amended by revising the first sentence of 
paragraph (c)(1) to read as follows:


Sec.  416.1414  Disability hearing--general.

* * * * *
    (c) Time and place--(1) General. Either the State agency or the 
Associate Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her 
delegate, as appropriate, will set the time and place of your 
disability hearing. * * *
* * * * *
    18. Section 416.1415 is amended by revising the second sentence of 
paragraph (a) and paragraph (c) introductory text to read as follows:


Sec.  416.1415  Disability hearing--disability hearing officers.

    (a) General. * * * The disability hearing officer will be an 
experienced disability examiner, regardless of whether he or she is 
appointed by a State agency or by the Associate Commissioner for 
Disability Determinations or his or her delegate, as described in 
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
* * * * *
    (c) Federal hearing officers. The disability hearing officer who 
conducts your disability hearing will be appointed by the Associate 
Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate if:
* * * * *

[[Page 35199]]

    19. Section 416.1417 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read 
as follows:


Sec.  416.1417  Disability hearing--disability hearing officer's 
reconsidered determination.

* * * * *
    (d) Effect. The disability hearing officer's reconsidered 
determination, or, if it is changed under Sec.  416.1418, the 
reconsidered determination that is issued by the Associate Commissioner 
for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate, is binding in 
accordance with Sec.  416.1421, subject to the exceptions specified in 
that section.
    20. Section 416.1418 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  416.1418  Disability hearing--review of the disability hearing 
officer's reconsidered determination before it is issued.

    (a) General. The Associate Commissioner for Disability 
Determinations or his or her delegate may select a sample of disability 
hearing officers' reconsidered determinations, before they are issued, 
and review any such case to determine its correctness on any grounds he 
or she deems appropriate. The Associate Commissioner or his or her 
delegate shall review any case within the sample if:
    (1) There appears to be an abuse of discretion by the hearing 
officer;
    (2) There is an error of law; or
    (3) The action, findings or conclusions of the disability hearing 
officer are not supported by substantial evidence.

    Note to paragraph (a): If the review indicates that the 
reconsidered determination prepared by the disability hearing 
officer is correct, it will be dated and issued immediately upon 
completion of the review. If the reconsidered determination prepared 
by the disability hearing officer is found by the Associate 
Commissioner or his or her delegate to be deficient, it will be 
changed as described in paragraph (b) of this section.

    (b) Methods of correcting deficiencies in the disability hearing 
officer's reconsidered determination. If the reconsidered determination 
prepared by the disability hearing officer is found by the Associate 
Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate to be 
deficient, the Associate Commissioner or his or her delegate will take 
appropriate action to assure that the deficiency is corrected before a 
reconsidered determination is issued. The action taken by the Associate 
Commissioner or his or her delegate will take one of two forms:
    (1) The Associate Commissioner or his or her delegate may return 
the case file either to the component responsible for preparing the 
case for hearing or to the disability hearing officer, for appropriate 
further action; or
    (2) The Associate Commissioner or his or her delegate may issue a 
written reconsidered determination which corrects the deficiency.
    (c) Further action on your case if it is sent back by the Associate 
Commissioner for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate 
either to the component that prepared your case for hearing or to the 
disability hearing officer. If the Associate Commissioner for 
Disability Determinations or his or her delegate sends your case back 
either to the component responsible for preparing the case for hearing 
or to the disability hearing officer for appropriate further action, as 
provided in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, any additional 
proceedings in your case will be governed by the disability hearing 
procedures described in Sec.  416.1416(f) or if your case is returned 
to the disability hearing officer and an unfavorable determination is 
indicated, a supplementary hearing may be scheduled for you before a 
reconsidered determination is reached in your case.
    (d) Opportunity to comment before the Associate Commissioner for 
Disability Determinations or his or her delegate issues a reconsidered 
determination that is unfavorable to you. If the Associate Commissioner 
for Disability Determinations or his or her delegate proposes to issue 
a reconsidered determination as described in paragraph (b)(2) of this 
section, and that reconsidered determination is unfavorable to you, he 
or she will send you a copy of the proposed reconsidered determination 
with an explanation of the reasons for it, and will give you an 
opportunity to submit written comments before it is issued. At your 
request, you will also be given an opportunity to inspect the pertinent 
materials in your case file, including the reconsidered determination 
prepared by the disability hearing officer, before submitting your 
comments. You will be given 10 days from the date you receive the 
Associate Commissioner's notice of proposed action to submit your 
written comments, unless additional time is necessary to provide access 
to the pertinent file materials or there is good cause for providing 
more time, as illustrated by the examples in Sec.  416.1411(b). The 
Associate Commissioner or his or her delegate will consider your 
comments before taking any further action on your case.

[FR Doc. 05-11886 Filed 6-16-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4191-02-P