PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This paper briefly outlines new research on the epidemiology of alcohol and drug use in the older population, describes mental and cognitive consequences of substance use and summarizes recent treatment trials for alcohol dependence. RECENT FINDINGS: Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies indicate that alcohol use is less prevalent in older groups, and it decreases over time. Comorbidity (alcohol and other drugs, alcohol with mental health disorders) is high. An inverse-U-shaped curve describes the association between alcohol consumption and cognitive impairment with increased impairment for abstainers and high users as compared with moderate users. Trials of alcohol use in the older population are rare, but they sugges...
Problematic alcohol use has been increasing in older adults (55+) in recent decades. Many of the eff...
Problematic alcohol use has been increasing in older adults (55+) in recent decades. Many of the eff...
Older adults are often described as "invisible addicts" due to difficulties in assessment ...
BACKGROUND: Harmful alcohol consumption is increasing in older people because of an ageing populatio...
With an estimated prevalence of 4%, substance abuse amongst persons who are 65 years and older is in...
Background and Purpose: Addiction is regarded as a disorder of brain function. The current paper aim...
Abstract Background Older individuals are consuming alcohol more frequently yet there is limited evi...
BACKGROUND: Harmful alcohol consumption in older people has increased and effective approaches to un...
BACKGROUND: Older adults are susceptible to adverse effects from the concurrent use of medications a...
Background: There is a lack of standardization regarding how to assess and categorize alcohol intake...
BACKGROUND: Older adults are susceptible to adverse effects from the concurrent use of medications a...
Background: There is a lack of standardization regarding how to assess and categorize alcohol intake...
Background: There is a lack of standardization regarding how to assess and categorize alcohol intake...
Introduction There is little epidemiological evidence and knowledge about at-risk alcohol use among ...
Problematic alcohol use has been increasing in older adults (55+) in recent decades. Many of the eff...
Problematic alcohol use has been increasing in older adults (55+) in recent decades. Many of the eff...
Problematic alcohol use has been increasing in older adults (55+) in recent decades. Many of the eff...
Older adults are often described as "invisible addicts" due to difficulties in assessment ...
BACKGROUND: Harmful alcohol consumption is increasing in older people because of an ageing populatio...
With an estimated prevalence of 4%, substance abuse amongst persons who are 65 years and older is in...
Background and Purpose: Addiction is regarded as a disorder of brain function. The current paper aim...
Abstract Background Older individuals are consuming alcohol more frequently yet there is limited evi...
BACKGROUND: Harmful alcohol consumption in older people has increased and effective approaches to un...
BACKGROUND: Older adults are susceptible to adverse effects from the concurrent use of medications a...
Background: There is a lack of standardization regarding how to assess and categorize alcohol intake...
BACKGROUND: Older adults are susceptible to adverse effects from the concurrent use of medications a...
Background: There is a lack of standardization regarding how to assess and categorize alcohol intake...
Background: There is a lack of standardization regarding how to assess and categorize alcohol intake...
Introduction There is little epidemiological evidence and knowledge about at-risk alcohol use among ...
Problematic alcohol use has been increasing in older adults (55+) in recent decades. Many of the eff...
Problematic alcohol use has been increasing in older adults (55+) in recent decades. Many of the eff...
Problematic alcohol use has been increasing in older adults (55+) in recent decades. Many of the eff...
Older adults are often described as "invisible addicts" due to difficulties in assessment ...