Abstract

BackgroundHealth behaviour patterns in older groups, including tobacco and alcohol use, are key factors in chronic disease prevention. We explore ageing self-perceptions as motivating factors behind smoking and drinking alcohol in older adults, and the complex reasons why individuals engage harmfully in these behaviours.MethodsCigarette and alcohol use was assessed in a large cross-sectional national sample aged 50 years and above from the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA) (n = 6,576). The Brief Ageing Perceptions Questionnaire (BAPQ) assessed individual’s views of their own ageing across five domains. Study hypothesis that stronger beliefs on each of the BAPQ domains would be related to drinking and smoking was examined using multinomial logit models (MNLM). Regression parameter estimates for all variables were estimated relative risk ratios (RRR).ResultsMore women were non-drinkers (30 % vs. 20 %) and men displayed significantly higher alcohol use patterns. One in five older Irish adults was a current smoker (16.8 % of women, 17 % of men), and smoking and harmful drinking were strongly associated (P < .001). Some domains of ageing perceptions were significantly associated with harmful drinking and smoking. While the risk of being be harmful drinker decreased with stronger beliefs about the positive consequences of ageing (RRR 0.89), it increased with higher scores on both emotional representation and control positive domains.Greater awareness of ageing and stronger emotional reaction to ageing increased likelihood of smoking. A greater sense of control over the outcomes of ageing was associated with increased risk of both harmful drinking (RRR control positive 1.16) and smoking (RRR control and consequences negative 1.25). This suggests optimistic bias in relation to perceived health risk from smoking and harmful drinking as a potential adverse effect of perceptions of control.Risks of concurrent smoking and harmful drinking increased with chronic awareness of ageing (RRR 1.24), and negative emotional responses to it (RRR 1.21), and decreased with stronger perceptions of the positive consequences of ageing (RRR 0.85).ConclusionsThe relationship between ageing perceptions, smoking and drinking is complex. Altering perceptions of ageing may be a useful intervention target aimed at facilitating engagement in preventative health behaviours in older people.

Highlights

  • Health behaviour patterns in older groups, including tobacco and alcohol use, are key factors in chronic disease prevention

  • This paper looks at the relationship between ageing self-perceptions and two of these health behaviours–tobacco and alcohol use

  • Prior to imputation and deletion of cases with missing data as described, missing data for alcohol intake (0 %), smoking behaviour (0.01 %) and sociodemographic variables (sex 0 %, age 0.14 %, marital status 0 %, education 0 %, Socio Economic Status (SES) 0.01 %, self-rated health (SRH) 0 %, depression 1.56 %) ranged from 0 to 1.56 %, while missing data for Brief Ageing Perceptions Questionnaire (BAPQ) domains ranged from 19.6 % to 21.4 %

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Summary

Introduction

Health behaviour patterns in older groups, including tobacco and alcohol use, are key factors in chronic disease prevention. We explore ageing self-perceptions as motivating factors behind smoking and drinking alcohol in older adults, and the complex reasons why individuals engage harmfully in these behaviours. As life expectancy in developed countries increases, greater health and social needs associated with ageing are anticipated. The median age of the population in developed regions increased from 29 years in 1950 to 40 years in 2010, and is projected to reach 44 by 2050. An informed understanding of the factors that promote and inhibit the lifestyle choices made by older adults is important in the context of chronic disease prevention. This paper looks at the relationship between ageing self-perceptions and two of these health behaviours–tobacco and alcohol use

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