83-10 |
Stooping—sedentary work |
“By its very nature, work performed primarily in a seated position
entails no significant stooping.” |
83-10 |
Stooping—light work |
“The lifting requirement for the majority of light jobs can be
accomplished with occasional, rather than frequent, stooping.” |
83-14 |
Stooping and crouching—light and sedentary work |
“However, to perform substantially all of the exertional
requirements of most sedentary and light jobs, a person would not need to
crouch and would need to stoop only occasionally.” |
83-14 |
Climbing, kneeling and crawling—medium work |
“In jobs at the medium level of exertion, there is more likelihood
than in light work that such factors as the ability to ascend or descend
ladders and scaffolding, kneel, and crawl will be a part of the work
requirement. However, limitations of these activities would not
significantly affect the medium occupational base.” |
83-14 |
Climbing, kneeling, and crawling—light work |
“On the other hand, there are nonexertional limitations or
restrictions which have very little or no effect on the unskilled light
occupational base. Examples are inability to ascend or descend
scaffolding, poles, and ropes, inability to crawl on hands and knees; and
inability to use the fingertips to sense the temperature or texture of an
object.” |
85-15 |
Climbing and balancing |
“Where a person has some limitation in climbing and balancing and it
is the only limitation, it would not ordinarily have a significant impact
on the broad world of work.” |
85-15 |
Stooping and crouching—
sedentary and light work |
“If a person can stoop occasionally (from very little up to
one-third of the time) in order to lift objects, the sedentary and light
occupational base is virtually intact.” “This is also true for
crouching.” |
85-15 |
Crawling and kneeling |
“However, crawling on hands and knees and feet is a relatively rare
activity even in arduous work, and limitations on the ability to crawl
would be of little significance in the broad world of work.”
“This is also true of kneeling.” |
96-9p |
Postural limitations—sedentary work |
“Postural limitations or restrictions related to such activities as
climbing ladders, ropes, or scaffolds, balancing, kneeling, crouching, or
crawling would not usually erode the occupational base for a full range of
unskilled sedentary work significantly because those activities are not
usually required in sedentary work.” |
96-9p |
Stooping—sedentary work |
“A complete inability to stoop would significantly erode the
unskilled sedentary occupational base and a finding that the individual is
disabled would usually apply, but restriction to occasional stooping
should, by itself, only minimally erode the unskilled occupational base of
sedentary work.” |