Rao Rahul, Schofield Peter, Ashworth Mark
Department of Old Age Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK.
Department of Primary Care and Public Health Sciences, King's College London, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2015 Aug 24;5(8):e007525. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-007525.
This study explores the relationship between alcohol consumption, health, ethnicity and socioeconomic deprivation.
27,991 people aged 65 and over from an inner-city population, using a primary care database.
Primary outcome measures were alcohol use and misuse (>21 units per week for men and >14 for units per week women).
Older people of black and minority ethnic (BME) origin from four distinct ethnic groups comprised 29% of the sample. A total of 9248 older drinkers were identified, of whom 1980 (21.4%) drank above safe limits. Compared with older drinkers, older unsafe drinkers contained a higher proportion of males, white and Irish ethnic groups and a lower proportion of Caribbean, African and Asian groups. For older drinkers, the strongest independent predictors of higher alcohol consumption were younger age, male gender and Irish ethnicity. Independent predictors of lower alcohol consumption were Asian, black Caribbean and black African ethnicity. Socioeconomic deprivation and comorbidity were not significant predictors of alcohol consumption in older drinkers. For older unsafe drinkers, the strongest predictor variables were younger age, male gender and Irish ethnicity; comorbidity was not a significant predictor. Lower socioeconomic deprivation was a significant predictor of unsafe consumption whereas African, Caribbean and Asian ethnicity were not.
Although under-reporting in high-alcohol consumption groups and poor health in older people who have stopped or controlled their drinking may have limited the interpretation of our results, we suggest that closer attention is paid to 'young older' male drinkers, as well as to older drinkers born outside the UK and those with lower levels of socioeconomic deprivation who are drinking above safe limits.
本研究探讨饮酒、健康、种族和社会经济剥夺之间的关系。
使用初级保健数据库,从市中心城区选取了27991名65岁及以上的人群。
主要结局指标为饮酒及饮酒不当(男性每周饮酒超过21单位,女性每周饮酒超过14单位)。
来自四个不同种族群体的黑人和少数族裔(BME)老年人占样本的29%。共识别出9248名老年饮酒者,其中1980名(21.4%)饮酒量超过安全限度。与老年饮酒者相比,老年不安全饮酒者中男性、白人和爱尔兰族裔的比例较高,而加勒比、非洲和亚洲族裔的比例较低。对于老年饮酒者,饮酒量较高的最强独立预测因素是年龄较小、男性性别和爱尔兰族裔。饮酒量较低的独立预测因素是亚洲、加勒比黑人和非洲黑人族裔。社会经济剥夺和合并症不是老年饮酒者饮酒量的显著预测因素。对于老年不安全饮酒者,最强的预测变量是年龄较小、男性性别和爱尔兰族裔;合并症不是显著预测因素。较低的社会经济剥夺是不安全饮酒的显著预测因素,而非洲、加勒比和亚洲族裔则不是。
尽管高饮酒量群体的报告不足以及已戒酒或控制饮酒的老年人健康状况较差可能限制了我们对结果的解释,但我们建议密切关注“年轻老年”男性饮酒者,以及在英国境外出生、社会经济剥夺水平较低且饮酒量超过安全限度的老年饮酒者。