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April 2024
All-cause mortality
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Old age

Alcohol use and mortality among older couples in the United States: Evidence of individual and partner effects

Spouses with concordant (i.e., similar) drinking behaviours often report better quality marriages and are married longer compared with those who report discordant drinking behaviours. Less is known regarding whether concordant or discordant patterns have implications for health, as couples grow older. A study examined whether drinking patterns among older couples are associated with mortality over time.
The Health and Retirement Study (HRS) is a nationally representative sample of individuals and their partners (married/cohabiting) over age 50 in the USA, in which participants completed surveys every two years. Participants included 4,656 married/cohabiting different-sex couples (9,312 individuals) who completed at least three waves of the HRS from 1996 to 2016. Participants reported whether they drank alcohol at all in the last three months, and if so, the average amount they drank per week. Mortality data were from 2016.
Concordant drinking spouses (both drank in the last three months) survived longer than discordant drinking spouses (one partner drank and the other did not) and concordant nondrinking spouses. Analysis of average drinks per week showed a quadratic association with mortality, such that light drinking predicted better survival rates among individuals and their partners compared with abstaining and heavy drinking. Further, similar levels of drinking in terms of the amount of drinking were associated with greater survival, particularly among wives.
The authors comment that study moves the field forward by showing that survival varies as a function of one’s own and one’s partner’s drinking.
Source: Kira S Birditt, Angela Turkelson, Courtney A Polenick, James A Cranford, Jennifer A Smith, Erin B Ware, Frederic C Blow, Alcohol Use and Mortality Among Older Couples in the United States: Evidence of Individual and Partner Effects, The Gerontologist, Volume 64, Issue 2, February 2024, gnad101

doi.org/10.1093/geront/gnad101
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