Worsening of health and a cessation or reduction in alcohol consumption to special occasion drinking across three decades of the life course
BACKGROUND: Ex-drinkers suffer from worse health than drinkers; however, whether a worsening of health is associated with a change in drinking status from early adulthood has not been previously investigated. We assess whether a worsening of health is associated with a cessation in consumption or reduction to special occasion drinking from early adulthood to middle age.
METHODS: Multinomial logistic regression assessing whether a change in self-reported limiting longstanding illness (LLI) was associated with ceasing alcohol consumption, or a reduction to special occasion drinking compared with being a persistent drinker from age 23 in separate models at ages 33, 42, and 50. All models adjusted for sex, poor psychosocial health, education, marital status, and children in the household. Sample included participants from Great Britain followed longitudinally in the National Child Development Study from ages 23 to 33 (N = 5,529), 42 (N = 4,787), and 50 (N = 4,476).
RESULTS: Developing an LLI from the previous wave was associated with ceasing alcohol consumption at ages 33 (odds ratio [ORs] = 2.71, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.16-4.93), 42 (OR = 2.44, 95%CI = 1.24-4.81), and 50 (OR = 3.33, 95%CI = 1.56-7.12) and a reduction to special occasion drinking at ages 42 (OR = 2.04, 95%CI = 1.40-2.99) and 50 (OR = 2.04, 95%CI = 1.18-3.53). Having a persistent LLI across 2 waves increased the odds of ceasing consumption at ages 42 (OR = 3.22, 95%CI = 1.06-9.77) and 50 (OR = 4.03, 95%CI = 1.72-9.44) and reducing consumption to special occasion drinking at ages 33 (OR = 3.27, 95%CI = 1.34-8.01) and 42 (OR = 2.25, 95%CI = 1.23-4.50). Persistent drinkers at older ages had the best overall health suffering less from previous poor health compared with those who reduced or ceased consumption at an earlier time point.
CONCLUSIONS: Developing an LLI was associated with a cessation in alcohol consumption and a reduction in consumption to special occasion drinking from early adulthood. Persistent drinkers who drank at least till 50 were the healthiest overall. Health selection is likely to influence nondrinking across the life course.
Additional Info
-
Authors
Ng Fat L.; Cable N.; Shelton N. -
Issue
Alcohol Clin.Exp.Res. / pages 166-174 / volume 39 -
Published Date
january 2015
Related items
- A systematic review of adolescent alcohol-related harm trends in high-income countries with declines in adolescent consumption
- Drinking Motives Among 15-16-Year-Old School-Going Students in 16 European Countries
- Volume of alcohol intake, heavy episodic drinking, and all-cause mortality in Spain: A longitudinal population-based study
- Is there a safe limit for consumption of alcohol?
- Alcohol Consumption Patterns and Mortality Among Older Adults With Health-Related or Socioeconomic Risk Factors