Kevin Hope appeals the Idaho Industrial Commission’s order that the Idaho Industrial Special Indemnity Fund (ISIF) was not liable for any of Hope’s benefits. The Commission found that Hope was totally and permanently disabled, but had failed to prove that his disability was a result of pre-existing back and shoulder impairments combined with his last shoulder injury. Hope argued that the Commission’s decision was based on errors of law and fact. We affirm the Commission’s order.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Hope injured his right shoulder in 2003 while he was working for Empro Professional Services (Empro). He argued to the Industrial Commission that ISIF was liable for part of his income benefits because he was totally and permanently disabled due to preexisting back and shoulder injuries that combined with his 2003 shoulder injury. If Hope’s total and permanent disability results from the combined effects of his 2003 shoulder injury and impairments that pre-existed that injury,, then ISIF is liable for the portion of income benefits caused by the preexisting injuries. Tarbet v. J.R. Simplot Co., 151 Idaho 755, 757, 264 P.3d 394, 396 (2011).
In 2012, Hope resided in Teton, Idaho, and was 55 years old. Throughout his life, Hope worked primarily in general construction labor jobs. Hope completed a trade school carpentry program, but never got his GED. Most of Hope’s work was- as a carpenter framing buildings. In these jobs, Hope had to do heavy lifting, bending, and twisting, as well as carrying a tool belt that weighed about thirty pounds.
Hope tore his right shoulder’s rotator cuff in 2000 while working for Pacific West Construction. That injury was diagnosed by Dr. Gary Walker, and Dr. Gregory Biddulph performed surgery in May 2000. After several follow-up visits, in November 2000 Dr. Biddulph released Hope with restrictions of no lifting more than 50 pounds, no repetitive or overhead activities, and no overhead reaching. In May 2001, Hope returned to Dr. Biddulph for bilateral shoulder pain. Dr. Biddulph found this pain was mild to palpitation and Hope still had a full range of motion and function. Dr. Biddulph recommended continued strengthening and assessed a 1% Permanent Partial Impairment (PPI) of the whole person as Hope’s shoulder still had good functionality.
In 2002 and 2003, Hope worked with Blaser Construction through Empro. Hope’s supervisor was Marty Blaser, who knew about his 2000 shoulder injury and that Hope needed help with heavy lifting. After starting this job, Hope returned to Dr. Biddulph reporting right shoulder pain with repetitive overhead reaching activities. Dr.'Biddulph ordered an MRI arthrogram, which showed no evidence of any labral or rotator cuff tear. Dr. Biddulph recommended either a cortisone injection or physical therapy; Hope got a cortisone shot two weeks later. Hope then suffered an industrial back injury in August 2002. Dr. David Booth treated Hope for this *570back injury and eventually referred Hope to Dr. Walker.
Hope suffered another industrial right shoulder injury in December 2003. Dr. Biddulph again examined Hope. He determined after an MRI that Hope had torn his right shoulder’s labrum and supraspinatus tendon. Dr. Biddulph performed arthroscopic surgery in February 2004. In May 2004, Dr. Biddulph released Hope to work with restrictions to not lift more than 30 pounds with no overhead, repetitive, or reaching activities. Hope has not been employed since December 22, 2003, the day he left work after his second right shoulder injury.
In March 2005, Hope requested that Dr. Robert Ward evaluate Hope’s injuries. Dr. Ward used Dr. Biddulph’s assessments and the AMA Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, Fifth Edition. Dr. Ward assessed Hope’s current shoulder impairment at an 8% of the whole person with 3% from his pre-existing shoulder injury and 5% for his 2003 shoulder injury. Dr. Ward also gave a 12% whole person impairment for Hope’s back. The Commission found Dr. Ward’s assessment credible, even more so than Dr. Biddulph’s assessment.
At a May 2006 deposition, Hope described his back and shoulder symptoms. He rated his injuries equally in terms of the problems they gave him. Hope attributed these symptoms to his August 2002 and December 2003 injuries. Hope stated that Marty Blaser had recently offered him his job back at Blaser Construction, but Hope declined because he thought he was not capable of those duties. The Commission consolidated Hope’s August 2002 back injury claim and his December 2003 right shoulder claim. Hope settled these claims against Empro prior to his April 5, 2012 hearing in front of the Commission’s Referee. After the 2012 hearing, the parties took depositions from two vocational disability consultants and filed briefs.
The Referee submitted recommended findings of fact and conclusions of law to the Commission, which the Commission adopted and approved. The Commission found that Hope proved he was totally and permanently disabled due to medical and nonmedical factors, as well as under the odd lot doctrine. The Commission found Hope proved his right shoulder medical restrictions meant he could only return to work doing sedentary and light jobs, which Hope could not get because he had no experience, had no high school diploma, and was a disabled-looking older worker.
The Commission then decided that ISIF was not liable for Hope’s benefits. The Commission found that although Hope had proven he had a pre-existing impairment that was manifest and a subjective hindrance, he could not recover because he did not prove his total and permanent disablement was the combined result of pre-existing and subsequent industrial injuries. The Commission noted that no physician gave an opinion on whether Hope’s 2000 shoulder injury combined with his 2003 shoulder injury to cause Hope’s permanent disability. Also, the Commission found that the medical records did not give a sufficient basis to draw the conclusion that Hope’s 2000 and 2003 shoulder injuries combined to cause permanent disability.
The Commission also concluded that while Hope’s lower back condition contributed significantly to his overall functional deficit, the weight of evidence meant Hope would have been totally and permanently disabled as a result of only his 2003 right shoulder injury. Hope filed a motion to reconsider, which the Commission denied. The Commission found the Referee discussed the combining with element and,the analysis was well-supported by evidence in the record. Hope timely appealed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
On appeal, we review whether the Commission’s findings of fact are supported by substantial and competent evidence. Eckhart v. Indus. Special Indem. Fund, 133 Idaho 260, 262, 985 P.2d 685, 687 (1999). Substantial and competent evidence is relevant evidence that a reasonable mind may accept to support a conclusion. Morris v. Hap Taylor & Sons, Inc., 154 Idaho 633, 636, 301 P.3d 639, 642 (2013). Substantial and competent evidence is more than a scintilla of evidence, but less than a preponderance. Id. We will not disturb the Commission’s eonclu*571sions on the weight and credibility of the evidence unless those conclusions are clearly erroneous. Eckhart, 133 Idaho at 262, 985 P.2d at 687.
However, we exercise free review over questions of law in the Commission’s decisions, which includes interpreting the worker’s compensation statutes. Brown v. Home Depot, 152 Idaho 605, 607, 272 P.3d 577, 579 (2012). We liberally construe worker’s compensation statutes in the employee’s favor. Clark v. Shari’s Mgmt. Corp., 155 Idaho 576, 579, 314 P.3d 631, 634 (2013). This Court reverses the Commission’s decisions when the findings of fact do not as a matter of law support the order. I.C. § 72-732(4). The Commission must make findings sufficient for meaningfid appellate review, but does not need detailed findings on every piece of evidence. Stoddard v. Hagadone Corp., 147 Idaho 186, 190, 207 P.3d 162, 166 (2009).
III. ANALYSIS
Hope argues the Commission’s findings, decision, and order grossly misapply the facts and the law. Hope contends that ISIF is liable for his worker’s compensation benefits because he is totally and permanently disabled due to pre-existing right shoulder impairments that combined with his 2003 industrial right shoulder injury. The Commission decided that ISIF was not liable for Hope’s benefits because Hope did not prove his total and permanent disablement was a combined result of pre-existing and subsequent industrial injuries.
A. The Commission’s denial of ISIF liability is supported by substantial and competent evidence.
ISIF compensates an injured worker’s remaining income benefits if a worker suffers total and permanent disability “by reason of the combined effects of both the pre-existing impairment and the subsequent injury.-...” I.C. § 72-332. The Commission evaluates whether a worker is permanently disabled by considering the claimant’s ability to engage in gainful activity as it is affected by the medical factor of permanent impairment and by non-medical factors. I.C. § 72-425. Here, vocational experts stated Hope’s upper right extremity medical restrictions meant he could only return to work doing sedentary and light jobs. The Commission noted that Hope’s nonmedical factors meant that Hope could not get these jobs because he had no experience, had no high school diploma, lived in a rural market, and was older and disabled-looking. Accordingly, the Commission determined that Hope was totally and permanently disabled.
After the Commission determines a worker is totally and permanently disabled, the worker must establish four elements to apportion liability to ISIF under Idaho Code section 72 — 332:(1) a pre-existing impairment; (2) that pre-existing impairment was manifest; (3) that pre-existing impairment was a subjective hindrance to employment; and (4) the pre-existing impairment and the subsequent injury combined to result in total and permanent disability. Bybee v. Indus. Special Indem. Fund, 129 Idaho 76, 80, 921 P.2d 1200, 1204 (1996). Here, the Commission found Hope’s 2000 shoulder injury was a preexisting impairment, was manifest,- and was a subjective hindrance to employment. Therefore, only the fourth element is at issue.
To satisfy the fourth element of Idaho Code section 72-332, a pre-existing impairment must combine with a subsequent injury. An employee who claims ISIF liability has the initial burden to establish that the injuries combined to result in total and permanent disability. Bybee, 129 Idaho at 82, 921 P.2d at 1206. To show the injuries combined, “a claimant must show that but for the pre-existing impairments, he would not have been totally permanently disabled.” Eckhart, 133 Idaho at 263, 985 P.2d at 688. This allows ISIF to assume the liability from preexisting injuries so employers do not pay full benefits for employees that become disabled because of their pre-existing injury. Id. at 264, 985 P.2d at 689. This encourages employers to hire workers with disabilities. Id. Thus, Hope’s burden was to show that he was not totally and permanently disabled from his 2003 shoulder injury aloné.
Hope argues that the standard of review is whether the Commission correctly applied *572the facts and law when interpreting Idaho Code section 72-332. However, Hope never explains how we should interpret Idaho Code section 72-332 except noting that any interpretation should be liberal.
The only error in law that Hope argues is that the Commission added an evidentiary rule by requiring medical testimony that shows that a previous surgery’s poor result contributed to the ultimate injury. While Hope does not state exactly where the Commission added this rule, it presumably comes from the Commission’s statement about whether Hope’s 2000 shoulder injury combined with his 2003 shoulder injury to cause total and permanent disability:
Unfortunately, no physician has opined on this ultimate question, and the medical records provide insufficient basis from which to draw this conclusion. Claimant clearly had preexisting shoulder pathology. However, it cannot be determined to a reasonable medical probability, based upon the evidence of record, that Claimant’s resultant loss of function would have differed in any way had his shoulder been completely healthy before his last industrial accident,
(emphasis added).
We have held on numerous occasions that a claimant must support his worker’s compensation claim with medical testimony that has a reasonable degree of medical probability. Sykes v. C.P. Clare & Co., 100 Idaho 761, 764, 605 P.2d 939, 942 (1980). The medical aspects of workmen’s compensation cases mean the cases “depend upon knowledge neither expected nor possessed by lay witnesses, and the basis for any award must rest upon and be supported by medical testimony.” Id. Claimants must prove causation with expert medical testimony, but the Commission may consider other evidence as well. Knowlton v. Wood River Med. Ctr., 151 Idaho 135, 140-41, 254 P.3d 36, 41-42 (2011). Here, Hope’s burden was to show that he would not have been totally and permanently disabled but for the pre-existing impairments; this is causation. Hope provided expert testimony, but only Dr. Ward gave any opinion on whether Hope’s two injuries combined to result in some permanent disability. However, Dr. Ward’s opinion was as to Hope’s PPI in 2005, and not whether the 2000 and 2003 shoulder injury combined to leave Hope totally and permanently disabled in 2012. Therefore, Hope’s experts did not give any medical opinion on whether Hope would be totally and permanently disabled without the 2000 shoulder injury. The Commission stated that “the medical records provide insufficient basis” to conclude that the 2000 shoulder injury combined with the 2003 shoulder injury. Thus, the Commission did not add an evidentiary rule to ISIF liability, but instead articulated why Hope did not meet his burden of proof.
Hope also argues that the Commission’s findings are not supported by substantial and competent evidence because the existence of his pre-existing shoulder injury was an undisputed fact that should be liberally construed. Hope is correct that the 2000 shoulder injury was undisputed, but simply having a pre-existing injury is not enough. Instead, we focus on “whether the evidence supports the Commission’s finding that the permanent impairments caused by Claimant’s last accident combined with the non-medical factors are sufficient by themselves to render him totally and permanently disabled.” Tarbet v. J.R. Simplot Co., 151 Idaho 755, 759, 264 P.3d 394, 398 (2011). A preexisting injury does not automatically combine with a subsequent injury.
Hope contends that Quincy v. Quincy, 136 Idaho 1, 27 P.3d 410 (2001), confirms that multiple injuries to a particular body part satisfy the combined with element. While in Quincy an employee’s ankle injuries combined to result in total and permanent disability, the main issue was apportionment and not whether the employee’s injuries combined. 136 Idaho at 6-8, 27 P.3d at 415-17. Hence, Quincy is irrelevant to this case. Indeed, we have affirmed other Commission decisions that found an employee’s pre-existing injuries did not combine with later injuries to result in total and permanent disability. See, e.g., Eckhart, 133 Idaho at 263-64, 985 P.2d at 688-89 (substantial and competent evidence supported Commission’s finding that employee was totally and permanently disabled solely as a result of a back *573injury and not from pre-existing arm and eye injuries).
Hope contends that he has proven that his 2000 and 2008 shoulder impairments combine because Dr. Ward assessed 3% impairment for the 2000 injury and 5% impairment for the 2003 injury, which combined to 8%. The Commission found, based on Dr. Ward’s assessment, that Hope suffered a 3% PPI for his right shoulder before December 2003 that combined with 5% PPI after 2003 for a total of 8% whole person PPL The Commission moved on to discuss whether Hope’s pre-existing injuries combined with his 2003 shoulder injury to result in total and permanent disability. The Commission noted the possibility that the two shoulder injuries could combine. The Commission then found that, despite Hope’s preexisting shoulder pathology, the medical records and other evidence were insufficient to carry Hope’s burden of proof. This was because the Commission found the evidence did not prove that Hope’s loss of shoulder function would have differed had his shoulder been completely healthy before the 2003 shoulder injury. In other words, Hope had not met his burden to prove the ,2000 and 2003 shoulder injuries combined to cause total and permanent disability. The Commission must make findings sufficient for meaningful appellate review, but does not need to make detailed findings on every piece of evidence. Stoddard, 147 Idaho at 190, 207 P.3d at 166. The Commission found the record was insufficient, which shows Dr. Ward’s assessment did not give the Commission sufficient basis to determine Hope was only permanently disabled because of both shoulder injuries.
The Commission’s finding is supported by substantial and competent evidence that (1) Hope provided insufficient evidence that his 2000 shoulder injury combined with his 2003 injury to cause total and permanent disability and (2) Hope’s 2003 shoulder injury alone caused total and permanent disability.
In the Commission’s analysis of Hope’s back issues, it cited Dr. Ward’s statement that
It must be noted with this last injury and surgery Mr. Hope has significant disability. To put it bluntly his shoulder is pretty well trashed! I doubt further surgery would help and I would be very surprised if any of the orthopedic surgeons would be inclined to use surgical intervention. He will have permanent lifting, reaching pushing pulling and carrying restrictions.
Hope argués that Dr. Ward saying the shoulder was “pretty well trashed!” referred to all of Hope’s shoulder problems. However, Hope’s interpretation conflicts with another reasonable interpretation. The language “with this last injury and surgery Mr. Hope has significant disability” could reasonably mean that the last injury trashed Hope’s shoulder all on its own. Evidence a reasonable mind might accept to support a conclusion is substantial and competent evidence to support the Commission’s findings. Morris v. Hap Taylor & Sons, Inc., 154 Idaho 633, 636, 301 P.3d 639, 642 (2013). Indeed, the Commission noted Dr. Ward’s analysis immediately after its conclusion that “the weight of evidence favors a finding the Claimant would be totally and permanently occupationally disabled as a result of his December 2003 right shoulder injury, alone.” Thus, Dr. Ward’s letter supports the Commission’s findings.
Other evidence in the record also supports the Commission’s findings. The Commission noted that Hope’s inability to engage in repetitive overhead activities or lift more than 30 pounds was related to his right shoulder impairment after his 2003 shoulder injury. The 2003 injury caused new tears to the shoulder, and Hope’s lifting restriction after the 2003 surgery was 30 pounds, lower than his previous 50 pound restriction. This lower lifting limit and the fact that the 2003 tears to the superior labrum were new are evidence showing the 2000 injury was not a cause of total and permanent disability. The burden is on the party claiming ISIF liability “to establish that the pre-existing impairment and the subsequent injuries in some way combined to result in total permanent disability.” Bybee, 129 Idaho at 82, 921 P.2d at 1206. ' These facts support the conclusion that Hope did not meet this burden. Thus, substantial and competent evidence supports the Commission’s findings.
*574Hope does not provide any argument on appeal about how his pre-existing' back injury combined with his 2003 shoulder injury. We do not consider issues on appeal that are not supported by law, authority, or argument. Woods v. Sanders, 150 Idaho 53, 60, 244 P.3d 197, 204 (2010). Thus, we do not consider the portion of the Commission’s decision that found Hope’s back injury did not combine with his 2003 shoulder injury to cause total and permanent disability. Because substantial and competent evidence supports the Commission’s finding that the 2003 shoulder injury alone resulted in total and permanent disability, we affirm the Commission’s order.
B. The Commission’s denial of Hope’s motion for reconsideration was within its discretion.
Hope also appeals the Commission’s denial of his Motion for Reconsideration, contending that the Commission failed to review the Referee’s finding. The Commission stated that Hope did not establish the “combined with” element because he did not prove his last injury combined with a pre-existing injury. The Commission noted that the Referee discussed the combining with element and the analysis was well-supported by the record. This Court reviews the Industrial Commission’s decision to deny a motion for reconsideration using an abuse of discretion standard. See Kirk v. Karcher Estates, Inc., 135 Idaho 230, 233, 16 P.3d 906, 909 (2000). The Commission reviewed the Referee’s finding twice: (1) when it adopted the initial order denying ISIF liability and (2) on reconsideration. Each time the Commission provided its reasoning. We therefore affirm the Commission’s denial of Hope’s motion for reconsideration.
C. Neither party is awarded attorney fees.
Hope contends that his attorney fees should be reimbursed on appeal because ISIF is well aware of the gross mistakes in the Commission’s order and thus should not have opposed this appeal. ISIF did not request attorney fees. Hope does not prevail in this appeal. Thus, we do not award him attorney fees.
IV. CONCLUSION
We affirm the Industrial Commission’s order. No attorney fees on appeal. Costs to ISIF.
Justices EISMANN and HORTON, concur.