Background:
modifiable behavioural risk factors including smoking and alcohol
consumption are major contributing or actual causes of mortality.
Objective: to examine the effect of alcohol intake on all-cause mortality in older adults.
Design and Setting: prospective population-based cohort study of residents of a California, United States retirement community.
Subjects:
8,877 women and 5,101 men (median age, 74 years) who in the early 1980s
completed a postal health srvey incluing details on alcohol
consumption.
Methods:
participants were followed for 23 years (1981–2004) including two
follow-up questionnaires (in 1992 and 1998) asking about current alcohol
intake. Age-adjusted and multivariate-adjusted risk ratios of death and
95% confidence intervals were calculated separately for men and women,
using proportional hazard regression.
Results:
of the 8,644 women and 4,980 men with complete information on the
variables of interest and potential confounders, 6,930 women and 4,456
men had died (median age, 87 years). Both men and women who drank
alcohol had decreased mortality compared with non-drinkers. Those who
drank two or more drinks per day had a 15% reduced risk of death. The
reduced risk was not limited to one type of alcohol. Stable drinkers
(those who reported drinking both at baseline and follow-up) had a
significantly decreased risk of death compared with stable non-drinkers.
Those who started drinking at follow-up also had a significantly lower
risk. Women who quit drinking were at increased risk of death.
Conclusion:
in elderly men and women, moderate alcohol intake exhibits a beneficial
effect on mortality. Those who quit may do so for health reasons that
affect mortality.
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