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Wiley InterScience

Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

Volume 54 Issue 5, Pages 757 - 762

Published Online: 30 Mar 2006

Journal compilation 2010 The American Geriatrics Society/Wiley Periodicals, Inc.



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Alcohol Use, Comorbidity, and Mortality
Alison A. Moore, MD, MPH * , Lisa Giuli, BS , Robert Gould, PhD , Peifeng Hu, MD, PhD * , Kefei Zhou, MS * , David Reuben, MD * , Gail Greendale, MD * and Arun Karlamangla, PhD, MD *
From the  *Department of Medicine, Division of Geriatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine, and  Department of Statistics, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California; and  Weill Medical College, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
 Address correspondence to Alison A. Moore, MD, MPH, Division of Geriatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, 10945 Le Conte Avenue, Suite 2339, Los Angeles, CA 90095. E-mail: aamoore@mednet.ucla.edu

 The study was presented in part at the American Geriatrics Society/American Federation for Aging Research Annual Scientific Meeting, May 2003, Baltimore, Maryland, and the American Public Health Association 131st Annual Meeting, November 2003, Atlanta, Georgia.

Copyright © 2006, The American Geriatrics Society
KEYWORDS
aged • alcohol • epidemiology • mortality

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To examine the combined influence of alcohol use and comorbidity on 20-year mortality in older adults (average age 66 at the time of the baseline survey).

DESIGN: Longitudinal analysis of a national probability sample–based cohort study.

SETTING: Data sources were the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I (NHANES I), 1971–1974, and the NHANES Epidemiologic Followup Survey, 1992.

PARTICIPANTS: Four thousand six hundred ninety-one adults aged 60 and older who provided data on alcohol use.

MEASUREMENTS: The prevalence of at-risk drinking in older adults in the United States and the 20-year all-cause mortality risk associated with it. At-risk drinking status was determined from amount of alcohol consumed and comorbidities, using a previously validated method.

RESULTS: The prevalence of at-risk drinking in the United States between 1971 and 1974 in older adults was 10% (18% of men, 5% of women). The majority of at-risk drinkers were identified as such because of their use of alcohol in amounts deemed risky in the presence of relevant comorbidities (69%) (e.g., drinking 2–3 drinks per day and having gout or anxiety or taking a medication for pain). In men, at-risk drinking was associated with higher mortality rates than not-at-risk drinking (hazard ratio=1.20, 95% confidence interval=1.01–1.41); abstinence was not associated with greater mortality. In women, neither abstinence nor at-risk drinking was associated with greater mortality rates.

CONCLUSION: In this first, large population-based study of older adults examining the mortality risks of alcohol use and comorbidity, at-risk drinking was associated with greater mortality rates in men. These findings suggest that a lower threshold of alcohol use should be recommended for older adults with specific comorbidities to reduce mortality risks.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1532-5415.2006.00728.x About DOI

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