dissenting.
I dissent and would reinstate the referee’s award. After considering claimant’s physical restrictions in conjunction with nonmedical factors, such as her age, limited education, limited employment experience and limited transferable skills, the referee concluded that
“* * * there is no realistic likelihood based upon existing occupational abilities that claimant will be able to sell her *150services to any employer and therefore find she is permanently and totally disabled.”
Claimant, 52 years old, slipped and fell while working as a cook, breaking her sacrum and right middle finger in July, 1978. The fractures healed with bed rest, but claimant developed headache and pain on the left side of her body and in her left shoulder and cervical area. She has seen numerous physicians and undergone extensive testing and evaluation. In July, 1979, at the insurer’s request, she was seen by Dr. Pasquesi. At that time, she was receiving physical therapy three times a week and chiropractic treatments twice a week and was wearing a low back brace. Dr. Pasquesi noted that x-rays submitted for the examination revealed extensive degenerative changes in both the lower lumbar area and the cervical spine area. He also stated that claimant had chronic moderate to severe pain.
In August, 1979, claimant entered a vocational rehabilitation program. Because she was physically unable to return to her usual occupation as a cook, she received training as an electronic component assembler. Her treating orthopedist, Dr. Neufeld, reported that, although she was experiencing pain, she was progressing in the program and wished to continue it. During the training, claimant was allowed to sit or stand as necessary to alleviate the pain; however, she was still unable to attend classes on a full-time schedule because of her physical condition.
Myelography was performed in January, 1980, which revealed small defects at the cervical and lumbar levels, but surgery was not recommended. In February, 1980, claimant’s treating chiropractor reported that the sitting required in her training classes “is a continuous aggravation which I believe is very damaging to her recovery rate.”
In July, 1980, claimant was again seen by Dr. Pasquesi. He reported:
“Healed fracture of the sacrum with marked preexisting degenerative disease in the lumbar spine area with some radiculitis extending down the left leg without motor or sensory objective changes. Pre-existing degenerative changes in the cervical spine area with radiculitis down the left arm. The patient also has apparent peritendinitis in the region of *151the left shoulder with restricted motion and continued discomfort.”
He stated that claimant should be able to function in some type of employment not requiring that she sit continually for an eight-hour period and that she has limited motion in her left arm and probably could not effectively use the arm above waist level. In July, 1980, her treating chiropractor described claimant’s lumbar pain as “excruciating, with [her] neck difficulties almost as bad.”
In August, 1980, the Vocational Rehabilitation Division closed her file because of “handicap too severe or unfavorable medical prognosis.” Claimant continued to seek medical assistance for pain. In April, 1981, Dr. Neufeld reported that her medical condition was essentially stable and that “[s]he will be restricted to very sedentary-type of work where she is doing only fine manipulations with her hands. Associated with this type of work would be the need for her to be able to get up and move around as needed.” In May, 1981, Dr. Franks, claimant’s treating neurosurgeon, stated that she had “a significant limitation of range of motion from a partial frozen shoulder, plus * * * continuing symptoms of tingling and discomfort going into the left thumb in the C6 nerve distribution which fits the myelographic defect, and also the EMG abnormality * * In October, 1981, claimant underwent a vocational evaluation. The vocational evaluator reported that she has extremely limited transferable skills to be utilized to locate employment in a competitive labor market and that she is vocationally handicapped with an extremely poor prognosis in locating any future employment within her skills and physical restrictions.
In December, 1981, Dr. Franks reported:
“She finds that she cannot walk for more than thirty minutes without having to stop or sit or preferably lie down because the pain gets so severe. When in the kitchen at home, she tries to stand and if over a few minutes, this will also increase the disabling pain in her low back.”
HUfi * * * *
“From a functional point of view [claimant], is unable to work in any activity involving bending, stopping, standing, walking [or], maintenance of a fixed posture. Thus, she needs work that will meet the fact that she is very restricted in her *152work activities. She will have pain whether or not she works; but, any activity involving the above functions will increase her degree of distress. She will always need a job in which she is able to change positions at will, to get up and move around, lie down when one fixed position or activity causes an increase of her pain. [Claimant] considers herself totally disabled, and at the age of fifty, not too many people would want to hire her with the significant restrictions placed upon her.”
Although Dr. Franks did not feel that claimant was “totally disabled,” he stated that “because of her chronic pain in the neck and low back which is exacerbated by activity, that her limitations will be rather prohibitive in her getting any type of reasonable employment.”
The record suggests that one of the reasons why claimant has not had surgery is that her condition would not be improved by surgery. Dr. Neufield had noted that he did not feel that surgery would help her low back pain and that an operation would “only be possibly of some help in the neck area.”
As detailed above, claimant has suffered continuous and severe pain in her low back, left leg, neck, left shoulder and left arm as a result of her injury. She is restricted in her ability to bend, stoop, walk, reach, stand, sit and maintain any fixed position. She has difficulty sitting for any length of time and is required to change positions frequently. She experiences increased symptoms when standing, walking, bending or engaging in any physical activity. She has a fifth-grade education. For the past 35 years she has been a fry cook. She has no other employment experience. She is incapable of returning to work as a cook and was enrolled in a vocational training program. Because of continual pain and inability to stand or sit for any length of time, she was only able to attend her training program for 2-1/2 hours per day. She completed her training as an electronics component assembler, but her rehabilitation counselor concluded that “her health has so deteriorated and she is in such pain that she is physically capable of doing only homebound employment. This would never provide enough income for a living wage.” Home employment was never secured for claimant.
Ultimately, claimant’s vocational rehabilitation file was closed, because the Vocational Rehabilitation Division *153determined that her handicap was “too severe” to obtain employment.
It appears that in light of claimant’s physical limitations, age, limited education and limited employment experience, further efforts to sell her services to an employer would be futile. Looper v. SAIF, 56 Or App 437, 642 P2d 325 (1982); Morris v. Denny’s, 50 Or App 533, 623 P2d 1118 (1981); Butcher v. SAIF, 45 Or App 313, 608 P2d 575 (1980). The referee’s award of permanent total disability was correct.
Richardson, J., joins in this dissenting opinion.