Aims: To examine the prevalence of and trends in older adults' (60-79 years) alcohol use in Norway between 1985 and 2019. Methods: Data stem from two repeated cross-sectional surveys in the Norwegian population: Statistics Norway's Health and Living Conditions Surveys from 1985 (N = 7799), 1995 (N = 3518) and 2005 (N = 6487), and the Norwegian Institute of Public Health's (NIPH) annual surveys on alcohol, tobacco and drug use from 2012/2013 (N = 4047), 2014/2015 (N = 4378), 2016/2017 (N = 4264) and 2018/2019 (N = 4330). The following measures were used to examine trends in alcohol use among women and men aged 60 and older: drinking status, drinking frequency, number of drinks per occasion, and frequency of heavy episodic drinking (HED). Results: Between 1985 and 2019, there has been a substantial increase in the proportions of older adults in Norway who drink alcohol and who drink relatively often. The increase was particularly marked between 1985 and 2012/2013, and for elderly women. However, the majority of older adults drink small amounts of alcohol on typical drinking occasions, illustrating that the increased frequency of drinking is not accompanied by a corresponding increase in risky drinking. Conclusions: There has been a marked increase in alcohol use among older adults the past 30 years, particularly among older women, suggesting that the age and gender gap traditionally found in alcohol use in Norway is diminishing. Due to the lower alcohol tolerance among elderly, monitoring the changing trends in alcohol use in this group, as well as the possible consequences of these changes, is important.
Aims: To examine the prevalence of and trends in older adults' (60-79 years) alcohol use in Norway between 1985 and 2019. Methods: Data stem from two repeated cross-sectional surveys in the Norwegian population: Statistics Norway's Health and Living Conditions Surveys from 1985 (N = 7799), 1995 (N = 3518) and 2005 (N = 6487), and the Norwegian Institute of Public Health's (NIPH) annual surveys on alcohol, tobacco and drug use from 2012/2013 (N = 4047), 2014/2015 (N = 4378), 2016/2017 (N = 4264) and 2018/2019 (N = 4330). The following measures were used to examine trends in alcohol use among women and men aged 60 and older: drinking status, drinking frequency, number of drinks per occasion, and frequency of heavy episodic drinking (HED). Results: Between 1985 and 2019, there has been a substantial increase in the proportions of older adults in Norway who drink alcohol and who drink relatively often. The increase was particularly marked between 1985 and 2012/2013, and for elderly women. However, the majority of older adults drink small amounts of alcohol on typical drinking occasions, illustrating that the increased frequency of drinking is not accompanied by a corresponding increase in risky drinking. Conclusions: There has been a marked increase in alcohol use among older adults the past 30 years, particularly among older women, suggesting that the age and gender gap traditionally found in alcohol use in Norway is diminishing. Due to the lower alcohol tolerance among elderly, monitoring the changing trends in alcohol use in this group, as well as the possible consequences of these changes, is important.
In the past few decades, alcohol use among older adults has gained increased attention,
in the Nordic countries and other European countries (e.g., Bye & Østhus, 2012; Frydenlund, 2011; Hallgren et al., 2009; Ramstedt, 2009), and in the United States
(e.g., Han et al., 2017).
There are several possible reasons for this. First, older adults constitute a growing
share of the population in Norway, as elsewhere. Due to the large number of Norwegian
citizens born in the 1940s and 1950s, lower birth rates over the past 50 years,
increased life expectancy and improved health, the proportion of older individuals will
increase in the next decades. In Norway, the proportion of the population aged 64 years
and older was 15% in 2011, and is expected to increase to 22% in 2040 (http://statbank.ssb.no/statistikkbanken). Moreover, the older adults of
today grew up in a wetter society than their parents and grandparents (Præstiin, 2008). Those who grew
up in the post-war era had a higher standard of living, increased availability of
alcohol as well as greater purchasing power thus resulting in a relatively lower price
of alcohol.The increasing number of older people drinking alcohol in Norway could result in more
alcohol-related problems in this group. Older adults have a lower alcohol tolerance due
to factors such as reduced muscle mass and slower metabolism; i.e., the same amount of
alcohol is more harmful to older than younger individuals (Anderson et al., 2012; Galluzzo et al., 2012). Hence, drinking a large
amount of alcohol on one occasion, i.e., heavy episodic drinking (HED), is particularly
likely to increase the risk for acute health and social problems as well as the risk for
accident injuries such as falls among older adults (Hartikainen et al., 2007; Woolcott et al., 2009).Additionally, older adults represent the largest consumer group of prescription drugs,
and the combined use of alcohol and prescription medicines may result in an increased
risk of harm and accidents for older adults who combine these substances, as well as for
the people around them (Bye &
Rossow, 2017; Moore et
al., 2007). In this context, it should be mentioned that compared to men,
women are particularly susceptible to the effects of alcohol due to their lower ability
to metabolise alcohol. The risk of negative consequences from equal amounts of alcohol
is thus more elevated for older women than for older men (Blow & Barry, 2002; Epstein et al., 2007; Wilson et al., 2014). Older women are also more
likely to be prescribed medicines (Berg, 2019) that can result in severe consequences when taken concomitantly
with alcohol (Moore et al.,
2007). To what extent the increased alcohol use among older adults will
affect injury and accident statistics in the future is of great interest, and monitoring
the alcohol use of older adults is therefore important.Registered alcohol sales in Norway increased sharply from an average of 5 to 6.75 litres
of pure alcohol per capita aged 15 years and older between the beginning of the 1990s
and 2008. After 2008, the registered sales of alcohol declined and the average has been
approximately 6 litres of pure alcohol per capita aged 15 years and older in the past
years (Bergsvik, 2019).
Studies of changes in alcohol use in the Norwegian general population since the 1970s
reveal three main changes. First, more people drink alcohol; there has been especially
an increase in the share of women and older adults who report drinking. Second, there
has been a change in the type of alcohol consumed, with a larger proportion of the
population drinking wine today compared with 25 years ago, while the proportion drinking
beer and liquor has remained fairly constant. The third and most important change is
that Norwegians drink alcohol more frequently than before (Bye & Østhus, 2012). Traditionally, there
has been both an age and a gender gap in alcohol use in Norway. Young adults and
middle-aged people have had more harmful drinking patterns than older adults, and men
have traditionally had more harmful drinking patterns than women, including more
frequent drinking and consumption of larger quantities per drinking occasion (Horverak & Bye, 2007).
However, some of these differences may have evened out in recent years.The possible changes in older adults’ alcohol use are addressed in a number of Norwegian
studies (mainly published in Norwegian), covering data from the period 1973–2004 (Horverak, 2006; Horverak & Bye, 2007),
1995–2008 (Bye & Østhus,
2012; Støver et al.,
2012), 2002/2003–2007/2008 (Løset & Slagsvold, 2013), and 2002–2008
(Brunborg & Østhus,
2015). However, a detailed overview of trends from 2008 onwards in older
adults’ alcohol use is lacking. Moreover, a common feature of previous studies
addressing changes in alcohol use among the middle-aged and elderly in Norway is that
older adults are either treated as one large age group (i.e., individuals aged 40 years
and above; Brunborg & Østhus,
2015), or as two age groups (e.g., 55–64/65–79 years in Bye & Rossow, 2019, and 51–65/66–79 years
in Bye & Østhus, 2012).
However, different changes may occur in the various age groups of older adults. Due to
the crude classification of older adults in previous studies, little is known about
whether the changes are consistent across various age segments. Thus, in the present
study we used a more refined division of adults above 60 years; 60–64 years, 65–69
years, 70–74 years, and 75–79 years. Trends in older adults’ alcohol use are the main
focus in this study. However, individuals aged 16–59 years were included to serve as a
reference group. This enabled us to examine whether potential changes in alcohol use
were valid only for older adults or whether the changes reflected a general trend. In
addition, because the trends in alcohol use seem to differ between women and men (Bye & Østhus, 2012), and
because older women are particularly susceptible to alcohol use (Blow & Barry, 2002; Epstein et al., 2007), gender-specific analyses
are warranted. Finally, because we wanted to examine possible changes in the level and
the pattern of drinking among older adults in Norway, several dimensions of alcohol use
were included in the analysis.The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of, and examine the trends, in
alcohol use among men and women aged 60 years and older in Norway between 1985 and 2019
with regard to drinking status, drinking frequency, number of drinks per occasion and
heavy episodic drinking (HED).
Methods
Procedure and respondents
Data from two large repeated cross-sectional surveys in the Norwegian population,
with similar questions on alcohol use at several time points, were used. The
first data set stems from Statistics Norway’s (SSB) Health and Living Conditions
Survey (HLCS) conducted in 1985, 1995 (Ramm, 2000) and 2005 (Hougen, 2006). In each
survey year, a representative sample (random) of the population of about 10,000
people aged 16 to 79 years first received information and a letter of invitation
to the study. In 1985 and 1995, all interviews were conducted as personal
interviews. In addition, a self-administered form including questions that may
be perceived as sensitive (about mental health, use of alcohol and drugs, etc.)
was left behind for the respondent to fill out and return postally after the
personal interview was completed. In 2005, the data collection was conducted as
a combination of personal and telephone interviews, along with a
self-administered form as used in 1995 (postal supplement for those who answered
by telephone).The second data set stems from annual surveys on alcohol, tobacco and drug use
(2012–2019) commissioned by the Norwegian Institute of Public Health (NIPH) and
carried out by Statistics Norway (for details see Amdam, 2015a, 2015b; Høstmark, 2014a, 2014b; Jensen, 2018; Lagerstrøm, 2018, 2019; Todorovic, 2019). Each year, a general
population sample (N = 3700) aged 16 to 79 years, regarded as representative
(random) of the adult population, was contacted by Statistics Norway and asked
to participate in a telephone survey (CATI) on alcohol- and drug-related topics.
The annual surveys from the NIPH have considerably lower sample sizes
(approximately 2000 respondents in each survey year) than the Health and Living
Conditions Survey. To obtain a sufficient number of respondents in the five-year
age groups among men and women aged 60+ years, we pooled data from the years
2012–2013, 2014–2015, 2016–2017 and 2018–2019.The surveys are weighted to take into account distortions that may arise between
sample and population with respect to socio-demographic characteristics (gender,
age, place of residence) or sampling procedure. Sample sizes and response rates,
and characteristics of the samples, for each survey year are displayed in Table 1. Adults aged
60 years and older were divided into four age groups (60–64 years, 65–69 years,
70–74 years and 75–79 years), and individuals aged 16–59 years were included to
serve as a reference group.
Table 1.
Total number of respondents per survey year, response rate, proportion of
women, mean age and number of respondents in each age group by
gender.
1985
1995
2005
2012/2013
2014/2015
2016/2017
2018/2019
Total
16–79 years
7799
3518
6487
4047
4378
4264
4330
Women
16–59 years
2991
1384
2552
1532
1640
1591
1601
60–64 years
287
107
236
165
147
148
168
65–69 years
300
108
184
133
157
141
119
70–74 years
226
111
120
85
109
128
145
75–79 years
204
96
111
80
100
88
96
Men
16–59 years
2910
1365
2619
1614
1721
1673
1688
60–64 years
274
91
247
159
184
165
155
65–69 years
248
111
172
134
130
143
126
70–74 years
234
85
144
86
110
122
145
75–79 years
125
60
102
59
80
65
87
Response rate
79
75
70
55
60
58
60
% women
51
51
49
49
49
49
49
Mean age (SD)
43.6
43.7
49.9
44.2
44.5
44.7
45.0
(17.8)
(17.1)
(16.5)
(16.9)
(17.2)
(17.2)
(17.4)
Total number of respondents per survey year, response rate, proportion of
women, mean age and number of respondents in each age group by
gender.
Measures
Current drinkers and frequency of drinking
In the survey years 1985–2019, the respondents were asked about frequency of
drinking in the past 12 months, with response categories ranging from “zero
times/never” to “4 times a week or more often”. In the present study, these
questions were collapsed into two drinking categories: (a) current
drinkers, where zero times/never was coded 0 (non-drinkers past
12 months), and all other values coded 1 (current drinkers); and (b)
frequent drinkers, where respondents who reported
drinking alcohol two days per week or more often were coded 1, and those who
reported drinking less than two days per week or zero times/never were coded
0.
Alcohol units consumed
From 2012 onwards respondents were asked “How many drinks containing alcohol
do you have on a typical day when you are drinking?”. This question
corresponds to the question asked in the Alcohol Use Disorders
Identification Test (AUDIT) (Babor, et al., 2001). The answers
ranged from 1–2 units to 10 or more units. Due to few respondents in the
highest categories, we use only four groups: “none”, “1–2 units”, “3–4
units”, or “5+ units”. Moreover, very few individuals in the age group 70–79
years reported more than 3+ units on a typical day, thus this measure is
displayed only for the age groups 16–59 years and 60–79 years.
Frequency of heavy episodic drinking
In the surveys from 1985, 2005 and 2012–2019 (the question was not included
in 1995), the respondents were asked about frequency of heavy episodic
drinking (HED), that is, drinking six alcohol units (e.g., four half-litres
of beer or one bottle of wine) or more on one drinking occasion. However,
the frequency categories were not defined in the same way for the years
1985, 2005 and 2012–2019. Thus, we constructed two variables: (1)
any HED in the past 12 months (coded 1 = any HED, 0 =
no HED) for all years, and (2) frequent HED, defined as
having six or more standard drinks on one occasion once a month or more
often (coded 1 = HED once a month or more often and 0 = HED less often/no
HED) for the years 2012–2019. As for number of alcohol units consumed,
frequent HED was also very uncommon among the elderly aged 65+ years,
especially women, so the elderly age groups were collapsed into one group
(60–79 years) for the frequent HED measure.
Mean frequencies
To illustrate the development of mean frequency of drinking and mean
frequency of HED, we calculated mean frequency variables for 2018/19 with
values: (a) daily/almost daily = 365, (b) 4–5 times a week = 234, (c) 2–3
times a week = 130, (d) once a week = 52, (e) more than three days a month
(36), (f) 2–3 times a month = 30, (g) once a month = 12, (h) more than three
days a year = 5, (i) 2–3 times a year = 3, (j) one day in the past year = 1,
and (k) none = 0.The results are presented separately for men and women, and the age groups
16–59 years (as a reference group), 60–64 years, 65–69 years, 70–74 years
and 75–79 years, with the exception of the measures of typical alcohol units
consumed and frequent HED, where only the age groups 16–59 years and 60–79
years were used.The question about typical alcohol units consumed was not included in the
HLCS studies. Furthermore, the frequency of HED question had different
response categories in the HLCS and NIPH studies and was not included in
1995. Thus, data are only presented for the years after 2005 for these two
measures.
Analyses
The data were analysed with SPSS, version 25. Descriptive statistics are
presented as percentages or means, across age groups and gender (weighted
data).
Results
Prevalence of current drinking
The proportion of current drinkers in Norway, in the years 1985 to 2019, is
displayed in Table
2. For respondents aged 60 years and above, the proportion of current
drinkers increased significantly, i.e., from 60% in 1985 to more than 80% in
2005 and onwards, while it was more or less stable in the reference group (16–59
years). The proportion of current drinkers has increased substantially and more
so among women than among men in the past 30 years (Table 2).
Table 2.
Proportions of current drinkers, gender and age, 1985–2019.
1985
1995
2005
2012/2013
2014/2015
2016/2017
2018/2019
Total
78
83
89
87
84
82
85
Men
85
87
91
90
87
86
87
Women
73
79
87
84
81
79
83
Age 60+ years
60
65
82
81
80
83
83
Age 16–59a years
85
88
91
89
85
77
85
aThe age group 16–59 years is included to serve as a
reference group.
Proportions of current drinkers, gender and age, 1985–2019.aThe age group 16–59 years is included to serve as a
reference group.The 12-month alcohol use prevalence and trends for men and women in different age
groups are shown in Figure
1. Figure 1
reveals substantial changes in the older age groups. It can be seen that the
changes are most pronounced in older women: in all four age groups 60 years and
older, the increase in the proportion of current drinkers has been approximately
30%. The largest relative increase was found among women aged 75–79 years, i.e.,
from 38% of current drinkers in 1985 to 71% in 2018/2019. However, the
proportion of women who are current drinkers is still lower for the 70–79-year
group (i.e., around 70%) compared to women aged 60–69 years (i.e., around 90%).
The proportion of current drinkers also increased among men in all four age
groups from 60+ years, with the largest increase found among men aged 75–79
years (from 57% to 82%). The proportion of current drinkers in the two oldest
age groups of men are more similar, i.e., around 80% among those aged 65–79
years and 90% among those aged 60–64 years. The proportion of current drinkers
in the reference group (16–59 years) has been relatively stable among men (90%)
and fluctuated between 80% and 90% among women in the period.
Figure 1.
Proportions of current drinkers, gender and age groups, 1985–2019
(percentages).
Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.
The gender gap narrowed markedly throughout this period, and in 2018/2019 the
proportion of current drinkers aged 65–69 years is somewhat higher among women
(87%) than among men (83%).Proportions of current drinkers, gender and age groups, 1985–2019
(percentages).Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.
Prevalence of frequent drinking
The proportion who reported drinking alcohol at least twice a
week (frequent drinkers) also increased between 1985 and 2018/2019,
and considerably more so among adults aged 60+ years (Table 3). In 1985, the prevalence of
frequent drinkers was higher in the reference group (8.3%) than among those aged
60+ years (6.7%). However, since 2005 the order is reversed: in 2018/2019, the
proportions were 25.1% for older adults and 13.6% for the reference group. Table 3 also shows
that frequent drinking increased among both men and women in the period, but
relatively more so for women. Moreover, the increase in the proportion of
frequent drinkers from 1985 to 2005 appears to have levelled out in the period
2012–2019.
Table 3.
Proportions of those who reported drinking alcohol twice a week or more
often (past 12 months), gender and age, 1985–2019.
1985
1995
2005
2012/2013
2014/2015
2016/2017
2018/2019
Total
7.9
12.0
17.5
15.7
16.5
17.9
16.4
Men
11.0
16.7
20.8
18.1
20.0
21.3
19.9
Women
5.5
7.7
14.6
13.2
12.9
14.4
12.7
Age 60+ years
6.7
11.0
19.9
23.6
24.6
24.4
25.1
Age 16–59a years
8.3
12.3
16.8
13.4
14.1
16.0
13.6
aThe age group 16–59 years is included to serve as a
reference group.
Proportions of those who reported drinking alcohol twice a week or more
often (past 12 months), gender and age, 1985–2019.aThe age group 16–59 years is included to serve as a
reference group.Figure 2 shows that
there has been an overall increase in frequent drinking (past year) in all four
60+ age groups both for men and women in the period 1985–2019, with a relatively
larger increase among women. However, the increase has not been consistent
throughout the whole period. It was most pronounced between 1985 and 2012/2013
and then there has been a tendency toward levelling out and even a decrease in
some age groups (e.g., among women aged 70–74 years). Moreover, while frequent
drinking was more common in the reference group (16–59 years) than in older age
groups until 1995, frequent drinking was more common among all older female age
groups after 2012/2013 and among all older male age groups after 2014/2015 than
the reference group (16–59 years). Among older women, the proportion of frequent
drinkers is similar in all age groups: one in five respondents reports frequent
drinking in the age group 60–79 years. Among older men, three out of ten report
frequent drinking with the exception of the oldest age group (75–79 years).
Figure 2.
The proportion of men and women who reported drinking alcohol twice a
week or more often (past 12 months) in different age groups,
1985–2019.
Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.
The gender gap also seems to be closing with respect to frequent drinking, but
still more men than women report frequent drinking in all older age groups.The proportion of men and women who reported drinking alcohol twice a
week or more often (past 12 months) in different age groups,
1985–2019.Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.
Typical amounts consumed
Figure 3 displays the
proportion reporting various numbers of alcohol units consumed on a typical
drinking day in 2012/2013 and 2018/2019 (data not available for the period
1985–2005). In 2018/2019, the majority of women aged 60+ years (64%) typically
consumed 1–2 units on a drinking day, while 15% reported drinking 3–4 units.
Among elderly men, the figures were 53% for 1–2 units and 23% for 3–4 units,
respectively. Drinking more than five units on a typical drinking day was
uncommon among elderly women (3%) and more common among elderly men (9%). This
pattern was consistent in the whole period 2012–2019. Drinking larger amounts of
alcohol, i.e., 3–4 and 5+ units, was more common in the reference group than
among older adults (Figure
3).
Figure 3.
Proportion of men and women in different age groups and number of alcohol
units consumed on a typical drinking day, 2012/2013 and 2018/2019
(percentages).
Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.
Proportion of men and women in different age groups and number of alcohol
units consumed on a typical drinking day, 2012/2013 and 2018/2019
(percentages).Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.Table 4 shows the
proportion who reported heavy episodic drinking (HED) in the past year. It can
be seen that the proportion of older adults (60+ years) reporting
any HED increased in the period, and more so for women than
men. In the reference group, the proportion reporting any HED was higher than
among older adults and fairly stable throughout the period.
Table 4.
The proportion who reported any heavy episodic drinking
(HED) in the past year, and HED once a month or more often in the past
year, age groups and gender, 1985–2019.
Any HED
HED once a month or more often
1985
2005
2012/2013
2014/2015
2016/2017
2018/2019
2012/2013
2014/2015
2016/2017
2018/2019
Total
46
54
51
49
52
50
18
18
17
17
Men
61
65
64
60
62
60
25
25
23
23
Women
33
43
38
38
42
40
10
11
11
10
Age 60+ years
17
24
22
27
30
26
6
8
10
7
Age 16–59a years
56
62
59
56
58
58
21
21
19
20
aThe age group 16–59 years is included to serve as a
reference group.
Data for frequent HED (i.e., once a month or more often) were
only available for the years 2012–2019. Less than one out of ten older adults
(60+ years) reported frequent HED in this period. Frequent HED was more common
in the reference group, i.e., about two out of ten reported frequent HED in this
group throughout the period. Finally, frequent HED was more common among men
than women (Table
4).The proportion who reported any heavy episodic drinking
(HED) in the past year, and HED once a month or more often in the past
year, age groups and gender, 1985–2019.aThe age group 16–59 years is included to serve as a
reference group.
Prevalence of heavy episodic drinking (HED)
Figure 4 displays the
proportion of women and men of different age groups reporting frequent HED
during the past year (2012–2019). The proportion of older men reporting frequent
HED has been fairly stable in the period 2012–2019, i.e., around 10%. Among
older women, the proportion increased from 3% in 2012/2013 to 7% in 2016/2017,
and was 5% in 2018/2019. Although the gender gap in frequent HED has narrowed
somewhat among older people, and remained stable at a higher level in the
reference group, frequent HED is still more common among older men than among
older women.
Figure 4.
The proportion of men and women who reported heavy episodic drinking
(HED) monthly or more often during the past year (2012–2019) in
different age groups (percentages).
Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.
The proportion of men and women who reported heavy episodic drinking
(HED) monthly or more often during the past year (2012–2019) in
different age groups (percentages).Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.To shed further light on the drinking patterns of older adults, we calculated the
average drinking frequency and average frequency of HED during the past year for
2018/2019 (Figure 5).
The figure clearly illustrates that even though the average frequency of
drinking increases with increasing age (until age 70 years), the opposite is
true for risky drinking such as HED. The average HED frequency is highest among
youth and young adults (16–29 years), fairly similar for the age groups between
40–59 years and lowest for the age group 60–79 years. Thus, the increase found
in frequency of drinking among older people is not accompanied by an increase in
heavy episodic drinking.
Figure 5.
Mean frequency of drinking and mean frequency of heavy episodic drinking
(HED) during the past year by age group, 2018/2019.
Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.
Mean frequency of drinking and mean frequency of heavy episodic drinking
(HED) during the past year by age group, 2018/2019.Source: NIPH/Statistics Norway.
Discussion
The aim of the present study was to examine drinking habits among older men and women
in Norway between 1985 and 2019. The results revealed several noteworthy trends in
alcohol use among older adults in Norway during the past three decades. First, the
overall proportion of current drinkers among older Norwegians increased
substantially between 1985 and 2019, and the increase was particularly large among
women aged 60 years and older. Today, the majority of older adults aged 60 years and
older report drinking alcohol. Second, the proportion who reported drinking
frequently increased in all age groups, both for women and men. However, the
relative increase in frequent drinking was most marked between 1985 and 2012/2013,
among women and those aged 60 years and above. Although there has been an overall
increase in drinking frequency, the most recent figures show that frequent drinking
is less prevalent than current drinking. Third, between 1985 and 2019, there has
been an increase in any heavy episodic drinking among older age groups 60+ years. In
the period 2012–2019, however, the proportion reporting frequent heavy episodic
drinking has remained fairly stable. The most recent data show that the majority of
older adults drink relatively few alcohol units (1 or 2) on typical drinking
occasions, and that only a small share of older adults report frequent heavy
episodic drinking.The results in this study are in line with other studies addressing alcohol use among
older people in Norway between 1973 and 2004 (Horverak & Bye, 2007), and between 1985
and 2008 (Bye & Østhus,
2012), which has shown that an increasing share of older adults have used
alcohol and that they did so relatively frequently. This study showed that the
increase among older adults continued until 2012/2013 and then levelled out. While
Bye and Østhus (2012)
found that the increase in the proportions of current drinkers and frequent drinkers
were similar for women and men, this study showed that the increase in both measures
was particularly marked for older women in all four age groups.Moreover, Bye and Østhus
(2012) also found that frequent heavy episodic drinking was rare among
older adults, and particularly among women. They found that this tendency was stable
in the study period (1985–2008). This corresponds with our findings, which revealed
no increasing trend for frequent HED, only an increase for any HED in the period.
Similarly, a more recent study showed that an increase in drinking frequency among
older adults between 2002 and 2008 was not accompanied by any substantial increase
in the frequency of drinking to intoxication (Brunborg & Østhus, 2015). This is in
line with the findings in the present study, i.e., increased drinking frequency
among older adults was not accompanied by a corresponding increase in risky
drinking, operationalised as the typical number of alcohol units per occasion and
frequent heavy episodic drinking.Thus, the increasingly common alcohol consumption observed among older adults in
Norway seems to be due mainly to an increase in the number of moderate alcohol
consumers and/or an increase in situations involving moderate alcohol consumption. A
noteworthy finding is that, for all measures of alcohol use applied in the current
study, the increase was most marked among women, and especially women born shortly
before and after World War II. Women who grew up in the post-war era had a higher
standard of living and experienced a general liberalisation in attitudes towards
drinking. This generation of women also were more represented in workplaces than
their mothers and grandmothers and thus had greater purchasing power and more access
to alcohol, which also became more available (Horverak & Bye, 2007). Moreover,
today’s elderly are healthier and live longer than the generations before them, in
addition they have better economy, more leisure time and they seem to bring their
established new habits regarding alcohol consumption into later life. Due to the
liberalisation in attitudes towards alcohol use over the past decades (Nordlund, 2008), it may
also be that adults in Norway who previously were abstainers began drinking in older
age. This was not possible to examine with the current data. Thus, to further
explain the changes in older adults’ alcohol use, this issue could be addressed in
future studies.This study suggests that both the age and gender gaps traditionally found for alcohol
use in Norway are closing. However, a larger proportion of men than women continue
to report heavy drinking episodes in general. The present study did not include a
measure of average quantity (volume). However, studies from Norway consistently show
that men in all age groups drink more often and greater quantities than women, with
the exception of wine, which is the preferred drink among the older generations
(e.g., Bye & Rossow,
2019). The rapidly changing demographics of Norway with a growing
proportion of elderly, and the increasing number of older adults who drink alcohol,
may entail a potentially large-scale public health challenge in the years to come.
For example, older adults often have a decreased tolerance for alcohol, and often
suffer from conditions that worsen when drinking alcohol, such as impaired balance
and confusion (Hartikainen et
al., 2007; Woolcott
et al., 2009). Consequently, we may expect that alcohol use, and in
particular acute effects of heavy episodic drinking, will increase the risk of
unintentional injuries such as falls. Studies show that the incidence of accidental
falls increases with increasing age: each year around a third of those aged 65 and
above, and about half of those aged 85 and above have at least one accidental fall
(Pfortmueller et al.,
2014). In addition, there are clear indications that simultaneous drug
and alcohol use in older adults constitutes a particular risk factor for accidental
injuries (Ilomäki et al.,
2013). Older women have a higher life expectancy than men, and will
continue to constitute a larger proportion of older adults. However, even though
older women are at particular risk of experiencing adverse effects of alcohol use,
e.g., due to their lower ability to metabolise alcohol compared to men (Blow & Barry, 2002;
Epstein et al., 2007;
Wilson et al., 2014),
older men still drink larger quantities and more often than older women and are thus
still at greater risk of harming themselves and others.
Methodological considerations
The strength of this study is that it is based on national representative surveys
and that it contains comparable measures of alcohol use over a period of more
than three decades. However, some methodological considerations warrant
attention. First, the prevalence of alcohol use is probably underestimated
because heavy drinkers are typically underrepresented in surveys, and because
alcohol use is underreported by survey respondents in general (Johnson, 2014). In
addition, the degree of underestimation might have changed over time. For
example, it has been shown that societal tolerance of alcohol use in Norway has
increased in accordance with an increase in alcohol consumption (Nordlund, 2008), thus
implying that the tendency to underreport might have been larger earlier, e.g.,
in 1985 than later, as in 2019. Hence, the changes in actual alcohol use among
older adults in fact might be less pronounced than what was found in the current
study. However, whether or not this is the case is impossible to determine using
the current data. Underreporting of alcohol use may also vary between age
groups. To our knowledge, no Norwegian study has examined whether underreporting
varies by age. However, an Australian study showed that underestimation of
alcohol use has varied between 15–49%, but underreporting did not vary
systematically between younger and older age groups. Underreporting was more
marked for young men and middle-aged women and less marked for young women and
older women (Livingston
& Callinan, 2015). Thus, it is difficult to determine how
potential age differences in underreporting may have affected the results of the
current study. Second, the methods used for data collection on the questions
related to alcohol use varied between postal questionnaires completed by means
of self-administration and telephone interviews. In general, survey modes that
rely on respondents’ self-administration are found to report larger amounts of
alcohol use than those modes that require interviewers to directly ask about
alcohol use. However, these mode effects are greater for the more sensitive
illicit substances, such as cocaine, as compared to alcohol use (Johnson, 2014).
Conclusions
This study shows that during the past three decades, there has been a marked increase
in the proportion of older adults in Norway who drink alcohol and who drink
relatively often. The increasing trend was most pronounced in the period between
1985 and 2012/2013, and for women. Especially women born around World War II seem to
bring established drinking habits into old age. Our study has shown that even though
the majority of older adults are current drinkers, relatively few are drinking
frequently and most older adults drink small amounts of alcohol on typical drinking
occasions. Thus, the findings from this study clearly illustrate that the observed
increase in drinking frequency among older adults in Norway is not accompanied by a
corresponding increase in risky drinking patterns such as heavy episodic drinking.
Nevertheless, considering that the share of older adults will increase in the years
to come, and the fact that older adults, and particularly women, are more vulnerable
to the adverse effects of alcohol than younger individuals, further research on
older adults’ alcohol use is needed. Thus, it is important to continue monitoring
the trends in older adults’ alcohol use, including those aged 80 years and older, as
well as the possible effects of these changes on their health and their risk of
being injured or involved in accidents. More knowledge about volume of alcohol
consumed and drinking context among the elderly is also warranted.
Authors: Benjamin H Han; Alison A Moore; Scott Sherman; Katherine M Keyes; Joseph J Palamar Journal: Drug Alcohol Depend Date: 2016-12-12 Impact factor: 4.492
Authors: John C Woolcott; Kathryn J Richardson; Matthew O Wiens; Bhavini Patel; Judith Marin; Karim M Khan; Carlo A Marra Journal: Arch Intern Med Date: 2009-11-23
Authors: Lucia Galluzzo; Emanuele Scafato; Sonia Martire; Peter Anderson; Joan Colom; Lidia Segura; Andrew McNeill; Hana Sovinova; Sandra Rados Krnel; Salme Ahlström Journal: Ann Ist Super Sanita Date: 2012 Impact factor: 1.663
Authors: Abhijit Nadkarni; Urvita Bhatia; Andre Bedendo; Tassiane Cristine Santos de Paula; Joanna Gonçalves de Andrade Tostes; Lidia Segura-Garcia; Marcela Tiburcio; Sven Andréasson Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst Date: 2022-08-08