Risky Alcohol Consumption in the Elderly: Screening and Brief Intervention from Primary Care. The ALANE Study, a Randomized Clinical Trial

IF 3 Q2 FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Beverages Pub Date : 2023-12-01 DOI:10.3390/beverages9040100
Pere Torán, Susanna Montesinos, Alba Pachón-Camacho, Galadriel Diez-Fadrique, Irene Ruiz-Rojano, Ingrid Arteaga, G. Pera, Núria Montellà-Jordana, Pilar Montero-Alía, Carmina Rodríguez-Pérez, Llorenç Caballería, Carla Chacón
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Abstract

Background: Risky alcohol consumption (RAC) can lead to alcohol-related liver disease (ALD). Liver cirrhosis caused by ALD continues to increase as alcohol consumption continues unabated. In turn, the elderly are more sensitive to alcohol. Population ageing calls for preventive activities to improve their health. Brief interventions have proven to be cost-effective in addressing risk behaviours. Aim: We aimed to analyse the prevalence of RAC in people > 64 years and to assess the effect of a brief intervention in the subgroup of risky consumers. Methods: population-based study in two phases: (1) Phase I: Cross-sectional, descriptive multicentre study of prevalence of RAC in people > 64 years. (2) Phase II: Cluster randomized, controlled, single-blind, community-based clinical trial with two comparison groups of subjects with RAC, to assess the effectiveness of a brief intervention compared to standard practice in reducing alcohol consumption in primary care. Results: Out of the 932 subjects, 455 (49%) (268 men (64%) and 187 women (36%)) had an alcohol consumption that was considered to be risky. Overall, the brief intervention was effective in reducing alcohol consumption showing 1.8 OR (p = 0.030). That effect was caused by women whose group showed 3.3 OR (p = 0.009). There was no effect on men (p = 0.468). Conclusions: RAC in the elderly is very high, far more in men than in women. A brief intervention was successful in reducing alcohol consumption but not below risk levels. Further research is needed to determine which types of interventions are most effective in this population subgroup.
老年人的饮酒风险:来自初级保健的筛查和简单干预。ALANE 研究,一项随机临床试验
背景:高风险饮酒(RAC)可导致酒精相关性肝病(ALD)。酒精摄入持续不减,ALD引起的肝硬化持续增加。反过来,老年人对酒精更敏感。人口老龄化要求开展预防活动,以改善他们的健康。事实证明,短期干预措施在处理风险行为方面具有成本效益。目的:我们旨在分析> 64岁人群中RAC的患病率,并评估对高危消费者亚组进行短暂干预的效果。方法:以人群为基础的研究分为两个阶段:(1)第一阶段:对> 64岁人群RAC患病率的横断面、描述性多中心研究。(2) II期:两组RAC患者的随机、对照、单盲、社区临床试验,以评估与标准做法相比,短期干预在减少初级保健中酒精消耗方面的有效性。结果:在932名受试者中,455名(49%)(268名男性(64%)和187名女性(36%))被认为有饮酒风险。总的来说,短期干预在减少酒精消费方面是有效的,OR值为1.8 (p = 0.030)。这种影响是由3.3 OR (p = 0.009)的女性引起的。对男性没有影响(p = 0.468)。结论:老年RAC发病率非常高,男性高于女性。一个简短的干预成功地减少了酒精消费,但没有低于危险水平。需要进一步的研究来确定哪种干预措施对这一人群最有效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Beverages
Beverages FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
8.60%
发文量
68
审稿时长
11 weeks
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