Abstract

We investigated the relation between alcohol drinking and healthy ageing by means of a validated health status metric, using individual data from the Ageing Trajectories of Health: Longitudinal Opportunities and Synergies (ATHLOS) project. For the purposes of this study, the ATHLOS harmonised dataset, which includes information from individuals aged 65+ in 38 countries, was analysed (n = 135,440). Alcohol drinking was reflected by means of three harmonised variables: alcohol drinking frequency, current and past alcohol drinker. A set of 41 self-reported health items and measured tests were used to generate a specific health metric. In the harmonised dataset, the prevalence of current drinking was 47.5% while of past drinking was 26.5%. In the pooled sample, current alcohol drinking was positively associated with better health status among older adults ((b-coef (95% CI): 1.32(0.45 to 2.19)) and past alcohol drinking was inversely related (b-coef (95% CI): −0.83 (−1.51 to −0.16)) with health status. Often alcohol consumption appeared to be beneficial only for females in all super-regions except Africa, both age group categories (65–80 years old and 80+), both age group categories, as well as among all the financial status categories (all p < 0.05). Regional analysis pictured diverse patterns in the association for current and past alcohol drinkers. Our results report the need for specific alcohol intake recommendations among older adults that will help them maintain a better health status throughout the ageing process.

Highlights

  • The relation between alcohol drinking and health remains quite complex

  • The present study revealed a high prevalence of current alcohol drinkers among older adults across present study revealed high current alcohol drinkers among olderadjusted adults theThe world; only one outaof fourprevalence reported a of frequent alcohol consumption

  • The present work analysed the relationship between alcohol drinking and health status during ageing, among older populations internationally, using the pooled ATHLOS mega-dataset

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Summary

Introduction

The relation between alcohol drinking and health remains quite complex. Alcohol drinking has been documented as a risk factor for chronic diseases and disability [1,2,3]. A variety of research studies have supported the notion that low or moderate consumption of alcohol is related to better health outcomes [4], while recent well-documented studies disagree and report the effect of “hidden systematic error” [5,6]. The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2016 alcohol study supported that no alcohol drinking is the only level that minimises the loss of health at the population level [7]. The global population is ageing with unpreceded speed, while the old (65+ years old) and oldest old (90+ years old) are the fastest growing population segment in various regions.

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