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

Author:

Torán Pere1234ORCID,Montesinos Susanna1,Pachón-Camacho Alba1,Diez-Fadrique Galadriel1,Ruiz-Rojano Irene15,Arteaga Ingrid15,Pera Guillem1ORCID,Montellà-Jordana Núria13,Montero-Alía Pilar16ORCID,Rodríguez-Pérez Carmina16,Caballeria Llorenç15,Chacón Carla157

Affiliation:

1. Research Support Unit of the North Metropolitan Area (USR Metro-Nord), University Institute for Primary Care Research Jordi Gol i Gurina (IDIAP Jordi Gol), 08303 Barcelona, Spain

2. Directorate of Primary Health Care of the North Metropolitan Area, Catalan Institute of Health (ICS), 08916 Badalona, Spain

3. Multidisciplinary Research Group in Health and Society (GREMSAS) (2021-SGR-0148), University Institute for Primary Care Research Jordi Gol i Gurina (IDIAP Jordi Gol), 08007 Barcelona, Spain

4. Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Universitat de Girona, 17004 Girona, Spain

5. Research Group on Liver Diseases in Primary Health Care (GRemHAp), University Institute for Primary Care Research Jordi Gol i Gurina (IDIAP Jordi Gol), 08007 Barcelona, Spain

6. Research Group on Interventions and Determinants Associated with Healthy Ageing (GRIADES), University Institute for Primary Care Research Jordi Gol i Gurina (IDIAP Jordi Gol), 08007 Barcelona, Spain

7. Sant Joan de Déu Teaching Campus, University of Barcelona, 08034 Barcelona, Spain

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.

Funder

Carlos III Institute of Health, Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness

European Union ERDF funds

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science

Reference35 articles.

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