Scottish Daily Mail

Well-off over-50s in ‘drink epidemic’

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

MIDDLE-CLASS over-50s have become a generation of problem drinkers, experts warn.

men and women who have done well in their careers and enjoy good health are the most likely to drink to harmful levels, according to a British study.

Researcher­s compared the drinking habits of 9,000 over-50s to their income, lifestyle and family situation. Those who were wealthier, better educated and whose children had left home were more likely to drink to harmful levels – more than 21 units (nine pints of beer) a week for men and more than 14 units (one and a half bottles of wine) for women.

Warning that heavy drinking is now a ‘middle-class phenomenon’, the experts said affluent baby boomers were ‘ sleepwalki­ng’ to ill health. Study leader Professor Jose Iparraguir­re, chief economist at Age UK, called for the Government to lower guidelines for older people. He said: ‘Harmful drinking may be a hidden health and social problem in otherwise successful older people.’

Doctors fear that older, more hardened drinkers are contributi­ng to increasing rates of obesity, cancer and liver disease.

The new research focused only on the over50s, and did not compare their drinking to that of younger groups, but previous research has found that middle-aged people are drinking more frequently than their children’s generation. Those youngsters who do drink tend to binge once or twice a week, while their parents’ generation are more likely to have two or three drinks a day – spreading their consumptio­n across the week.

Experts suspect this shift is largely to do with price and affordabil­ity, with older people more able to afford alcohol. It is also now more socially acceptable to drink at home.

The research, based on surveys of 9,250 people carried out in 2009 and repeated in 2011, suggests women are more likely to increase their drinking once they have retired, and then slow down as they get older.

men’s drinking is not so closely tied to retirement, but consumptio­n peaks in the early 60s before declining.

men who were divorced or separated are more likely to be heavy drinkers.

The researcher­s wrote in the medical journal BmJ Open: ‘We can sketch – at the risk of much simplifica­tion – the problem of harmful drinking among people aged 50 or over as a middle-class phenomenon: people in better health, higher income, with higher educationa­l attainment and socially more active are more likely to drink at harmful levels.’

Liver expert Professor Sir Ian Gilmore, chairman of the Alcohol Health Alliance, said last night: ‘Whilst it may be true that middleclas­s drinkers are able to offset some health problems because of healthier diets and lifestyles more generally, the risks of serious health harms are still significan­t.

‘For example, even low levels of drinking increase the risk of developing cancer. This highlights the need for more consumer informatio­n, including mandatory health warnings on alcohol product labelling.’

John Larsen, of Drinkaware, said: ‘ Older people could potentiall­y be sleepwalki­ng into long-term health problems as a result of their drinking patterns.’

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