Screening for At-Risk Alcohol Use in Older Adults: What Progress Have We Made?

Journal of Addictions Nursing

Abstract

About one in every seven Americans is an older adult (13.7%). Almost half (41.7%) of this population reported current alcohol use in 2013 with a little more than 1 in 10 (11.2%) reporting at-risk use of alcohol, placing them at risk for adverse consequences associated with alcohol use such as injury, use of alcohol-interactive medications, and use of alcohol contraindicated in other comorbid medical and psychiatric diagnoses, underlying the importance of having reliable and valid methods to screening for at-risk alcohol use in older adults. The question is, "are we making progress in this area?". The purpose of this review is to present two publications, a decade apart, focused on systematically screening older adults to prevent or reduce the harms associated with alcohol use. In addition, this review includes an examination of the shift from focusing on identifying older adults with a possible alcohol use disorder to identifying alcohol-related health risks across the continuum of use in older adults.

References

Nov 1, 1995·The International Journal of the Addictions·J W Smith
Oct 14, 2004·International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry·Henry O'ConnellBrian A Lawlor
Dec 20, 2007·Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition and Metabolic Care·Patrick Meier, Helmut K Seitz
Jan 20, 2015·Alcoholism, Clinical and Experimental Research·Rosalind A BreslowAaron White

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