Intervention helps curb older adults' drinking but doesn't significantly lower drinking risks

Jan 21, 2011

(PhysOrg.com) -- An intervention program aimed at curbing at-risk drinking among older adults succeeded in helping these individuals significantly reduce their overall alcohol consumption, according to a new UCLA study.

But while the multi-component intervention, which was administered through primary care settings, also helped participants reduce the risks their posed when combined with medications, psychiatric or medical conditions, and other comorbidities common to older adults, the reduction was not much greater than that seen among other older adults who were provided with only general information on healthy behaviors.

At-risk drinking among older adults could potentially result in injury or even death.

Data from the study are published in the January issue of the journal Addiction.

"We have an and more than half drink alcohol," said lead investigator Dr. Alison Moore, a professor of medicine in the division of geriatrics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. "Older adults have additional risks compared with younger adults because of age-related physiological changes that increase the effect of a given dose of alcohol and because of the increase in medical and and the use of medications that may interact negatively with alcohol.

"We wanted to test an intervention to reduce alcohol-related risks in primary care, where most older adults receive care," she said.

The findings were based on the Healthy Living as You Age study, a that tested a screening and multi-component intervention among older at-risk drinkers in primary care settings. The study included 631 adults aged 55 and older recruited between October 2004 and April 2007 from three primary care sites in Southern California.

Participants in the yearlong study were identified as being at-risk by the Comorbidity Alcohol Risk Evaluation Tool, which utilizes information on alcohol use, medications that can interact negatively with alcohol (such as those for ulcers, pain and sleeping) and medical and psychiatric conditions, and symptoms that could be caused or worsened by alcohol (such as hypertension, depression, abdominal pain and memory problems).

The study subjects were randomly assigned during a primary care office visit to either receive a booklet on general healthy behaviors for older adults, which including recommended drinking limits, or the intervention, which included a personalized report of their alcohol-related risks, a drinking diary to help them keep track of their consumption, a booklet on aging and drinking, and advice from a primary health care provider and telephone counseling from a health educator at two, four and eight weeks after the start of the study.

Participants in both groups consumed about 15 alcoholic drinks each week at the beginning of the study. All were identified as at-risk drinkers, and most were identified as at-risk for multiple reasons, including drinking while taking medications (73 percent), symptoms (60 percent), medical or psychiatric conditions (50 percent) or simply their amount of drinking (47 percent). 

At the three-month point, individuals in the intervention group had lowered their to an average of nine drinks a week; those in the control arm had reduced their consumption to 11. These numbers remained roughly the same at the one-year point, a statistically significant difference between the groups.

At three months, only 40 percent of the intervention group and 61 percent of the control group were still at-risk drinkers, a statistically significant difference. At one year, however, the difference between the groups narrowed: 54 percent of the intervention arm was at-risk, compared with 60 percent of the control group, and the difference then was not statistically significant.

"One of the important messages here is that, for both groups, the amount of drinking declined by 30 to 40 percent and the proportions of those at-risk declined by 50 to 60 percent at three months and generally persisted at 12 months," Moore said.  "Also older at-risk drinkers typically have multiple risks; most because of combined use of alcohol and medications or medical and psychiatric conditions. It may be that simply giving information on recommended drinking limits for is enough to cause large reductions in at-risk drinking and amount of drinking." 

The National Institute of Abuse and Alcoholism, the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Mental Health, the John A. Hartford Foundation, and a Special Fellowship in Advanced Geriatrics from the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System funded this study.

Explore further: New rice contamination reported in China

More information: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.03229.x/full

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Drinking can trigger high death rate

Apr 10, 2006

A UCLA study has determined older men who have as few as two drinks weekly and who have diseases that are worsened by alcohol have a high death rate.

Moderate drinking: Health benefits or not?

Aug 24, 2010

While moderate drinking - one to less than three drinks per day - is linked to a decrease in mortality in middle-aged and older adults, there is also concern that the health benefits of moderate drinking have been overestimated. ...

Older adults more impaired by social drinking

Mar 05, 2009

Older adults may be more affected by a couple of glasses of wine than their younger counterparts are -- yet they are less likely to be aware of it, a new study suggests.

Recommended for you

New rice contamination reported in China

1 hour ago

Authorities are investigating rice mills in southern China following tests that found almost half of the staple grain in one of the country's largest cities was contaminated with a toxic metal.

Cancer and birth defects in Iraq: The nuclear legacy

3 hours ago

Ten years after the Iraq war of 2003 a team of scientists based in Mosul, northern Iraq, have detected high levels of uranium contamination in soil samples at three sites in the province of Nineveh which, coupled with dramatically ...

Dirty jokes the best medicine

3 hours ago

When it comes to men's sexual health, dirty jokes may just be the best medicine. A QUT researcher is helping Family Planning Queensland (FPQ) use comedy and YouTube to deliver sexuality education to young ...

Holding drivers' attention

4 hours ago

Each day, an average of nine people are killed in the United States and more than 1,000 injured by drivers doing something other than driving.

User comments : 0

More news stories

Study shows where scene context happens in our brain

In a remote fishing community in Venezuela, a lone fisherman sits on a cliff overlooking the southern Caribbean Sea. This man –– the lookout –– is responsible for directing his comrades on the water, ...

New rice contamination reported in China

Authorities are investigating rice mills in southern China following tests that found almost half of the staple grain in one of the country's largest cities was contaminated with a toxic metal.

NGOs denounce Malaysia hydropower meeting

Three dozen Malaysian NGOs on Tuesday denounced the world hydroelectric industry's decision to hold a conference in a Borneo state where dam projects have uprooted forests and native peoples.