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Wiley InterScience

Addiction

Addiction

Volume 100 Issue 9, Pages 1291 - 1301

Published Online: 15 Jul 2005

Journal compilation © 2010 Society for the Study of Addiction



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RESEARCH REPORT
Lower cognitive test scores observed in alcohol abstainers are associated with demographic, personality, and biological factors: the PATH Through Life Project
Kaarin J. Anstey 1 , Timothy D. Windsor 1 , Bryan Rodgers 1 , Anthony F. Jorm 1 & Helen Christensen 1
  1 Centre for Mental Health Research, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia
Correspondence to  Kaarin Anstey, Centre for Mental Health Reseach, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia, Tel: +61 26125 8410, Fax: +61 26125 0733, E-mail: kaarin.anstey@anu.edu.au.
Copyright 2005 Society for the Study of Addiction
KEYWORDS
Adult • alcohol drinking • cognition • middle-aged • risk factors • temperance

ABSTRACT

Aims  To identify variables that explain the association between alcohol abstention and cognitive performance. We hypothesized that demographic and personality variables would be important for explaining the association in all age cohorts, but that health variables would be more important in the older age-cohorts.

Design  Three age cohorts (20–24, 40–44, 60–64 years) were sampled randomly, yielding a total of 7485 participants, with data from 602 alcohol abstainers and 4158 light or moderate drinkers used in this study.

Setting  The sample was drawn from the cities of Canberra and Queanbeyan, Australia.

Measurements  Scales measuring demographic, health and personality variables and cognitive and physical tests were administered. Participants drinking at hazardous or harmful levels were excluded from the analysis.

Findings  A range of demographic and physical function measures were found to explain partially the finding of abstainers having lower cognitive test scores. The effects of independent variables were largest in the 60–64-year-old age group with a trend for physical variables such as lung function and grip strength to become more important in the older age groups. In the 20–24-year-olds, the majority of the effect remained unexplained.

Conclusion  There is evidence that poorer cognitive test performance by abstainers reflects in part selection effects and poorer physical functioning, but does not appear to be due to mental or physical health conditions or personality.


Submitted 13 September 2004; initial review completed 24 November 2004; final version accepted 16 March 2005

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1360-0443.2005.01159.x About DOI

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