OPINION
O’CONNOR, Presiding Judge.
This special action is from a determination by the Industrial Commission closing petitioner’s industrial claim with a finding of no permanent disability. Specifically, the issue is whether an industrially caused condition known as “meat wrapper’s asthma,” which prevents petitioner from continuing her employment as a meat wrapper,
constitutes a permanent impairment within the meaning of the workmen’s compensation statutes. We find that the evidence does not support the administrative determination of no permanent impairment and, therefore, set the award aside.
Petitioner, Geraldine Hunter, worked as a meat wrapper for approximately nine years when she developed a bronchial hypersensitivity known as meat wrapper’s asthma. She filed a workmen’s compensation claim for benefits. Her claim was accepted by the carrier and she was eventually discharged by her treating physician. The carrier issued a notice of claim status closing the claim. Petitioner requested a hearing alleging that she had sustained permanent physical impairment. After a hearing, the administrative law judge entered an award finding petitioner’s condition to be stationary with no permanent impairment and no disability. After the award was affirmed on administrative review, petitioner brought the case to this court by special action.
On review, petitioner contends that, although her lung condition is not ratable under the American Medical Association guides to rating impairments (AMA guides), the medical testimony shows that her industrial injury renders her unable to return to her former employment. Therefore, she asserts she has sustained a permanent functional impairment and is entitled to proceed to a loss of earning capacity determination.
The basic compensation statute, A.R.S. § 23—1044, provides in part as follows:
(C) ... [W]here the injury causes permanent partial disability for work, the employee shall receive during such disability compensation ... but the payment shall not continue after the disability ends. . . .
(G) The commission may adopt ... reasonable and proper rules to carry out the provisions of this section.
The Industrial Commission has promulgated a rule, A.C.R.R. R4-13-113, which provides in part as follows:
******
D. If upon discharge from treatment the physician finds that the employee has sustained an impairment of function as the result of the injury, he shall so state in his report. Any rating of the percentage of functional impairment shall be in accordance with the standards for the evaluation of permanent impairment as published by the American Medical Association in “Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment”. It shall include a clinical report in sufficient detail to support the percentage ratings assigned.
The Arizona Supreme Court upheld the adoption of the rule quoted above in
Smith v. Industrial Commission,
113 Ariz. 304, 552 P.2d 1198 (1976), and also adopted the definitions of “permanent impairment” and “permanent disability” found in the AMA guides:
(1)
Permanent Impairment.
This is a purely medical condition. Permanent impairment is any anatomic or functional abnormality or loss after maximal medical rehabilitation has been achieved, which abnormality or loss the physician considers stable or non-progressive at the time evaluation is made. It is always a basic consideration in the evaluation of permanent disability.
(2)
Permanent Disability.
This is not a purely medical condition. A patient is “permanently disabled” or “under a permanent disability” when his actual or presumed ability to engage in gainful activity is reduced or absent because of “impairment” which, in turn, may or may not be combined with other factors. . . .
Id.
at 305-06 n.l, 552 P.2d 1198 at 1199-2000 n.l.
These definitions make it clear that the determination of whether an injured worker has sustained a “permanent disability,”
i. e.,
a loss of earning capacity, is a two-step process. Only after a permanent physical
or functional impairment has been found does the question of loss of earning capacity arise.
“Determination of permanent impairment is a medical question while evaluation of a permanent disability is a law question.”
Alsbrooks v. Industrial Commission,
118 Ariz. 480, 482, 578 P.2d 159, 161 (1978). Therefore, the question to be resolved in this case is not the legal question whether petitioner has sustained a loss of earning capacity, but the medical question whether petitioner has shown a permanent functional impairment causally related to her employment. If petitioner shows such an impairment, she would be entitled to proceed to a loss of earning capacity determination.
We first consider the effect of a statement made by Irvin Belzer, M.D., that petitioner had suffered “no permanent reaction to her previous employment.” A thorough reading of Dr. Belzer’s testimony reveals that this statement was not based upon his specific medical findings pertaining to petitioner, but upon his personal view that medical science has not yet determined the long-term effects of meat wrapper’s asthma. He stated:
... I am not aware of any long term studies that have shown that that kind of exposure of itself continued over a long period of time leads to a permanently disabling situation. There are statements of literature that would imply that.
Medical opinions not based on medical findings should not form the basis of an award.
Royal Globe Insurance Co. v. Industrial Commission,
20 Ariz.App. 432, 513 P.2d 970 (1973). Thus Dr. Belzer’s opinion regarding the incomplete state of medical knowledge about meat wrapper’s asthma in general does not preclude a finding that petitioner has sustained a permanent functional impairment, where testimony specifically pertaining to petitioner so indicates.
The uncontroverted testimony of both medical witnesses, Dr. Belzer and Dr. Engelsberg, M.D., was that petitioner had developed a bronchial hypersensitivity known as meat wrapper’s asthma and caused by her industrial exposure to fumes from polyvinyl chloride, which is contained in the material used to wrap meat for sale in markets.
Further, both doctors agreed that petitioner’s industrially caused physical condition
permanently
precludes her from functioning in any employment which would expose her to polyvinyl chloride or other lung irritants.
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OPINION
O’CONNOR, Presiding Judge.
This special action is from a determination by the Industrial Commission closing petitioner’s industrial claim with a finding of no permanent disability. Specifically, the issue is whether an industrially caused condition known as “meat wrapper’s asthma,” which prevents petitioner from continuing her employment as a meat wrapper,
constitutes a permanent impairment within the meaning of the workmen’s compensation statutes. We find that the evidence does not support the administrative determination of no permanent impairment and, therefore, set the award aside.
Petitioner, Geraldine Hunter, worked as a meat wrapper for approximately nine years when she developed a bronchial hypersensitivity known as meat wrapper’s asthma. She filed a workmen’s compensation claim for benefits. Her claim was accepted by the carrier and she was eventually discharged by her treating physician. The carrier issued a notice of claim status closing the claim. Petitioner requested a hearing alleging that she had sustained permanent physical impairment. After a hearing, the administrative law judge entered an award finding petitioner’s condition to be stationary with no permanent impairment and no disability. After the award was affirmed on administrative review, petitioner brought the case to this court by special action.
On review, petitioner contends that, although her lung condition is not ratable under the American Medical Association guides to rating impairments (AMA guides), the medical testimony shows that her industrial injury renders her unable to return to her former employment. Therefore, she asserts she has sustained a permanent functional impairment and is entitled to proceed to a loss of earning capacity determination.
The basic compensation statute, A.R.S. § 23—1044, provides in part as follows:
(C) ... [W]here the injury causes permanent partial disability for work, the employee shall receive during such disability compensation ... but the payment shall not continue after the disability ends. . . .
(G) The commission may adopt ... reasonable and proper rules to carry out the provisions of this section.
The Industrial Commission has promulgated a rule, A.C.R.R. R4-13-113, which provides in part as follows:
******
D. If upon discharge from treatment the physician finds that the employee has sustained an impairment of function as the result of the injury, he shall so state in his report. Any rating of the percentage of functional impairment shall be in accordance with the standards for the evaluation of permanent impairment as published by the American Medical Association in “Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment”. It shall include a clinical report in sufficient detail to support the percentage ratings assigned.
The Arizona Supreme Court upheld the adoption of the rule quoted above in
Smith v. Industrial Commission,
113 Ariz. 304, 552 P.2d 1198 (1976), and also adopted the definitions of “permanent impairment” and “permanent disability” found in the AMA guides:
(1)
Permanent Impairment.
This is a purely medical condition. Permanent impairment is any anatomic or functional abnormality or loss after maximal medical rehabilitation has been achieved, which abnormality or loss the physician considers stable or non-progressive at the time evaluation is made. It is always a basic consideration in the evaluation of permanent disability.
(2)
Permanent Disability.
This is not a purely medical condition. A patient is “permanently disabled” or “under a permanent disability” when his actual or presumed ability to engage in gainful activity is reduced or absent because of “impairment” which, in turn, may or may not be combined with other factors. . . .
Id.
at 305-06 n.l, 552 P.2d 1198 at 1199-2000 n.l.
These definitions make it clear that the determination of whether an injured worker has sustained a “permanent disability,”
i. e.,
a loss of earning capacity, is a two-step process. Only after a permanent physical
or functional impairment has been found does the question of loss of earning capacity arise.
“Determination of permanent impairment is a medical question while evaluation of a permanent disability is a law question.”
Alsbrooks v. Industrial Commission,
118 Ariz. 480, 482, 578 P.2d 159, 161 (1978). Therefore, the question to be resolved in this case is not the legal question whether petitioner has sustained a loss of earning capacity, but the medical question whether petitioner has shown a permanent functional impairment causally related to her employment. If petitioner shows such an impairment, she would be entitled to proceed to a loss of earning capacity determination.
We first consider the effect of a statement made by Irvin Belzer, M.D., that petitioner had suffered “no permanent reaction to her previous employment.” A thorough reading of Dr. Belzer’s testimony reveals that this statement was not based upon his specific medical findings pertaining to petitioner, but upon his personal view that medical science has not yet determined the long-term effects of meat wrapper’s asthma. He stated:
... I am not aware of any long term studies that have shown that that kind of exposure of itself continued over a long period of time leads to a permanently disabling situation. There are statements of literature that would imply that.
Medical opinions not based on medical findings should not form the basis of an award.
Royal Globe Insurance Co. v. Industrial Commission,
20 Ariz.App. 432, 513 P.2d 970 (1973). Thus Dr. Belzer’s opinion regarding the incomplete state of medical knowledge about meat wrapper’s asthma in general does not preclude a finding that petitioner has sustained a permanent functional impairment, where testimony specifically pertaining to petitioner so indicates.
The uncontroverted testimony of both medical witnesses, Dr. Belzer and Dr. Engelsberg, M.D., was that petitioner had developed a bronchial hypersensitivity known as meat wrapper’s asthma and caused by her industrial exposure to fumes from polyvinyl chloride, which is contained in the material used to wrap meat for sale in markets.
Further, both doctors agreed that petitioner’s industrially caused physical condition
permanently
precludes her from functioning in any employment which would expose her to polyvinyl chloride or other lung irritants. The industrial commission may not arbitrarily disregard the only reasonable inference which can be drawn from uncontradicted testimony.
Ratley v. Industrial Commission,
74 Ariz. 347, 248 P.2d 997 (1952). We find that the only reasonable inference here is that petitioner has a permanent industrially caused functional impairment.
Neither doctor was able to rate petitioner’s condition under the AMA guides.
However, the AMA guides apply only to the extent that they cover the specific impairment and the percentage thereof.
Smith v.
Industrial Commission,
113 Ariz. 304, 552 P.2d 1198 (1976);
Adams v. Industrial Commission,
113 Ariz. 294, 552 P.2d 764 (1976). Since both doctors testified that petitioner’s industrially-caused hypersensitivity permanently precludes her from returning to work as a meat wrapper, we find that petitioner has met her burden of proving a permanent functional impairment causally related to her employment. Accordingly, she is entitled to proceed to a hearing to determine whether her impairment has caused a loss of earning capacity.
Hughes Aircraft v. Industrial Commission,
129 Ariz.App. 233, 630 P.2d 56 (1981).
The court’s opinion in
Alvarado v. Industrial Commission,
115 Ariz. 113, 563 P.2d 912 (App.1977) does not require a contrary result. The
Alvarado
opinion did not directly address the question of whether an industrially caused permanent functional impairment due to a hypersensitivity could constitute an unscheduled injury entitling the claimant to a loss of earning capacity determination pursuant to A.R.S. § 23-1047. The court in
Alvarado
merely analyzed the application of the Langbell
doctrine to a case of contact dermatitis when the employee was reemployed full time without disability. In the instant case petitioner was still unemployed at the time of the hearing, although she had attempted to find other employment.
Because the uncontroverted medical testimony in this case is that petitioner’s industrially-caused condition has permanently restricted her functional ability to return to work as a meat wrapper, the award finding no permanent impairment was in error. Our disposition of the matter makes it unnecessary to reach the other arguments raised by petitioner, including those regarding the fairness of the proceedings.
The award is set aside.
WREN and FROEB, JJ., concur.