Ageing and Alcohol: Drinking Typologies among Older Adults.
Ann M RocheNathan J HarrisonJanine ChapmanVictoria R KostadinovRichard J WoodmanPublished in: Journal of aging and health (2020)
Objectives: Alcohol consumption and harms among older people are increasing. We examined different demographic characteristics and drinking patterns among an older population. Methods: Secondary analyses of nationally representative Australian data; subjects aged 50+ years (N = 10,856). Two-step cluster analysis was performed to identify demographic groups and alcohol consumption behaviours. Results: Three groups were identified: Group 1 (older, unmarried, and lived alone): >65 years, moderate drinkers, poorest health, psychological distress, social disadvantage, smokers, illicit drug users, and more frequent previous alcohol treatment. Group 3 (older married): >65 years, good health, low psychological distress, less likely to drink at risky levels, and one in five drank daily. Group 2 (younger married): 50-64 years, mostly employed, highest proportion of risky drinkers and of 5+ standard drinks per session, and liberal drinking attitudes with most concern from others about their drinking. Discussion: These demographic typologies can inform targeted prevention efforts for an estimated 1.3 million adults older than 50 years drinking at risky levels.
Keyphrases
- alcohol consumption
- physical activity
- community dwelling
- healthcare
- mental health
- middle aged
- public health
- high intensity
- emergency department
- smoking cessation
- sleep quality
- electronic health record
- cancer therapy
- climate change
- health promotion
- deep learning
- risk assessment
- machine learning
- data analysis
- replacement therapy
- intimate partner violence