Department of Preventive Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Department of Health Policy and Management, University of Maryland School of Public Health, College Park, Maryland, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2023 Nov;71(11):3508-3519. doi: 10.1111/jgs.18497. Epub 2023 Jul 5.
It is unclear how older adults with chronic conditions, who have greater risk of alcohol-related adverse outcomes, used alcohol throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. We assess changes in hazardous drinking prevalence May 2020-December 2021 and factors associated with hazardous drinking.
Data are from structured phone interviews of older adults (age 60+) with chronic conditions (e.g., hypertension, diabetes, pulmonary disease, heart disease) in a Chicago-based longitudinal cohort (Chicago COVID-19 Comorbidities survey, Waves 3-7, n = 247). We tested differences in the prevalence of hazardous drinking (defined as AUDIT-C score of 3+ for women and 4+ for men) across waves for the full sample, by demographic group (sex, race, and ethnicity), and by chronic condition burden (<3 conditions, 3+ conditions). Generalized estimating equations investigated associations of hazardous drinking with sociodemographic and pandemic coping-related factors (stress, loneliness, outside contacts, depression, anxiety).
Participants were 66.8% female; 27.9% non-Hispanic Black, 14.2% Hispanic, 4.9% other race. Hazardous drinking was reported by 44.9% of participants in May 2020, but declined to 23.1% by July-August 2020 and continued to slowly decline to 19.4% by September-December 2021. Differences from May 2020 were significant at the 0.05 level. Subgroups followed similar trajectories. Hazardous drinking prevalence was initially higher but declined more among men than women, consistently higher among non-Hispanic White respondents than among Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black respondents, and declined more rapidly among adults with 3+ chronic conditions. In adjusted models, race and ethnicity were associated with lower prevalence of hazardous drinking (non-Hispanic Black: adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] = 0.50, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.33, 0.74; other race: aPR = 0.26, 95% CI = 0.09, 0.81, compared with non-Hispanic White). No coping-related factors were significantly associated with hazardous drinking.
Among a cohort of older adults with chronic conditions, almost half engaged in hazardous drinking in early summer of the COVID-19 pandemic. While prevalence fell, these rates reinforce the need for alcohol screening and intervention in clinical settings among this population.
患有慢性疾病的老年人面临更大的酒精相关不良后果风险,我们不清楚他们在整个 COVID-19 大流行期间的饮酒情况。我们评估了 2020 年 5 月至 2021 年 12 月期间危险饮酒的流行率变化,以及与危险饮酒相关的因素。
数据来自芝加哥基于纵向队列的对患有慢性疾病(如高血压、糖尿病、肺部疾病、心脏病)的老年人(年龄 60 岁以上)进行的结构化电话访谈(芝加哥 COVID-19 合并症调查,第 3-7 波,n=247)。我们测试了全样本在各波次中危险饮酒(女性 AUDIT-C 评分≥3,男性 AUDIT-C 评分≥4)的流行率差异,按人口统计学特征(性别、种族和民族)和慢性疾病负担(<3 种疾病,≥3 种疾病)进行分组。广义估计方程调查了危险饮酒与社会人口学和大流行应对相关因素(压力、孤独、外部接触、抑郁、焦虑)之间的关联。
参与者中 66.8%为女性;27.9%为非西班牙裔黑人,14.2%为西班牙裔,4.9%为其他种族。2020 年 5 月报告有 44.9%的参与者存在危险饮酒,但到 2020 年 7-8 月下降到 23.1%,并持续缓慢下降到 2021 年 9-12 月的 19.4%。与 2020 年 5 月相比,差异具有统计学意义(P<0.05)。亚组的轨迹相似。男性的危险饮酒患病率最初较高,但下降幅度大于女性,非西班牙裔白人的危险饮酒患病率始终高于西班牙裔和非西班牙裔黑人,有 3 种以上慢性疾病的成年人下降速度更快。在调整后的模型中,种族和民族与较低的危险饮酒患病率相关(非西班牙裔黑人:调整后的患病率比[aPR]=0.50,95%置信区间[CI]为 0.33-0.74;其他种族:aPR=0.26,95%CI 为 0.09-0.81,与非西班牙裔白人相比)。没有与应对大流行相关的因素与危险饮酒显著相关。
在患有慢性疾病的老年人队列中,近一半人在 COVID-19 大流行的初夏期间存在危险饮酒行为。虽然流行率有所下降,但这些数据仍强调需要在临床环境中对该人群进行酒精筛查和干预。