Wednesday 24 Apr 2024

40% of people over 50 drink too much!

Research says not just teenagers or students, its time to be just as worried about how much alcohol our parents and grandparents are consuming

| OCTOBER 05, 2018, 03:11 AM IST

Mention  hazardous drinking and most of us imagine teenagers or students getting  drunk, causing havoc and filling our emergency departments on a Friday  night. 

But what if I told you that we should be just as worried about how much our parents and grandparents are drinking?

Our  latest research shows that up to 40% of adults aged 50 and over are  hazardous drinkers. This increases to almost 50% for men in this age  group.

Alcohol-related risk for older adults: Alcohol is the drug of  choice for baby boomers. However, the older we get the lower the  threshold for hazardous drinking is for two key reasons. First, ageing  bodies can’t process alcohol as well as they used to so we get drunk  faster and feel the effects more. 

Second, the older we get the more  likely we are to have developed health conditions that alcohol  exacerbates and to use medication that alcohol can interfere with.

Despite  the heightened risks, we know older adults are less likely to be  screened for alcohol than other groups. Further, when screening occurs,  it usually ignores the combined health and medication risk factors that  place older drinkers at such high risk.

Our research aimed to answer  three simple questions: How many older adults are hazardous drinkers?  Who is most at risk of harm? Where can we find them?

Hazardous  drinkers: We used data from more than 4,000 New Zealanders aged 50 and  over in the government-funded Health, Work and Retirement study at  Massey University. We compared the number of hazardous drinkers  identified on two different screening tests: a standard screening and  one specific to older adults. 

The Alcohol Use Disorders  Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C) is a standard screening for  primary health care. It assesses how often you drink, how much you  drink, and how often you binge (have six or more drinks). You are a  hazardous drinker if your drinking pattern puts you at risk of harm  immediately (weekly binge drinking) or in the long-term (frequent  moderate drinking).

The Comorbidity Alcohol Risk Evaluation Tool  (CARET) is a screening specific to alcohol-related harm for older  adults. It assesses drinking patterns but modifies the allowable  drinking frequency, quantity and binge limits based on the presence of  health conditions and health issues that alcohol can make worse, and  medication that alcohol can interfere with.

First, we found that 83%  of older New Zealanders in this sample were current drinkers, while 13%  were past drinkers who no longer drank, and 4% were lifetime abstainers.

Second,  we found the CARET classified 35% of the sample as hazardous drinkers  compared to 40% on the AUDIT-C. The higher proportion on the AUDIT-C  resulted from our use of a stricter threshold for hazardous drinking  than used on the CARET.

Approximately 10% of non-hazardous drinkers  on the AUDIT-C were classed as hazardous on the CARET because despite  their low levels of alcohol use their existing ill health and medication  use made any drinking potentially harmful.

Most at risk of harm: We  were able to identify key characteristics of older drinkers who were  hazardous in both tests or one test only. 

* Hazardous drinkers on  both screens were predominantly healthy men who drank high amounts of  alcohol very frequently, with monthly binge drinking

*Hazardous  drinkers on AUDIT-C only were healthy men and women who drank small  amounts of alcohol very frequently, with some binge drinking

*  Hazardous drinkers on CARET only were unhealthy men and women who drank  small amounts of alcohol frequently, with little or no binge drinking.

This  suggests GPs and practice nurses need to understand even older adults  in good health require screening for their alcohol use, particularly  older men. Further, any indication of very frequent drinking (five or  more times a week) and binge drinking is a flag for concern. 

Any older adults in poor health definitely require screening for alcohol use as any level of consumption may be dangerous. 

Where  are the older hazardous drinkers: For a GP or a practice nurse, older  hazardous drinkers will be some of their most frequent patients. We  found the majority of older hazardous drinkers saw their GP three or  more times a year. Approximately 60% of drinkers whose ill health places  them most at risk of harm actually visit their GP almost once a month.

International  research shows health professionals are reluctant to talk to older  adults about their drinking, older adults are less likely to be screened  for alcohol use, and younger adults are prioritised for treatment. But  the results of our study suggest the GPs office is the ideal setting to  start this conversation about alcohol with older adults.

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