Higher rates of alcohol problems have been found among older Irish people who spent time as emigrants. The findings are referenced in yesterday’s report from the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing — which was launched by Trinity in 2006 to study a sample of 8,000 people aged 50 and over and resident in Ireland. The project aims to chart their health, social and economic circumstances over a ten-year period. Researchers found that almost a quarter of the men and just over a fifth of the women included in the study had lived abroad for at least six months. Of that number, over 40 per cent were abroad over ten years
This report, from the Health Research Board, shows strong evidence of the increase of alcohol-relate...
The aim of this research was to examine drinking habits and experiences of drinking among men and wo...
Background: Alcohol consumption was assessed in English and Irish men and women aged 65 and over, li...
Between 2009 and 2011, fieldwork was undertaken for the first wave of the Irish Longitudinal Study ...
The resumption of population outflows from Ireland since 2010 has regenerated an interest in the eff...
Aims: Few studies have examined how the settlement experiences of migrant parents might impact on th...
Background: Alcohol consumption was assessed in English and Irish men and women aged 65 and over, li...
Within the economics literature, the 'psychic costs' of migration have been incorporated into theor...
This report uses data from the second wave of TILDA data collection, which lasted from April 2012 to...
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to determine whether trajectories of older adults' alcoho...
Long-standing stereotypes portray Irish people as prone to use alcohol to excess. This review traces...
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to determine whether trajectories of older adults' alcoho...
Inequalities in the physical and psychological health of the first- and second-generation Irish subj...
A binge-drinking culture could be behind Northern Ireland’s high rates of heart disease, according t...
The HSE yesterday released a major report into the harm caused by alcohol in Ireland. The study m...
This report, from the Health Research Board, shows strong evidence of the increase of alcohol-relate...
The aim of this research was to examine drinking habits and experiences of drinking among men and wo...
Background: Alcohol consumption was assessed in English and Irish men and women aged 65 and over, li...
Between 2009 and 2011, fieldwork was undertaken for the first wave of the Irish Longitudinal Study ...
The resumption of population outflows from Ireland since 2010 has regenerated an interest in the eff...
Aims: Few studies have examined how the settlement experiences of migrant parents might impact on th...
Background: Alcohol consumption was assessed in English and Irish men and women aged 65 and over, li...
Within the economics literature, the 'psychic costs' of migration have been incorporated into theor...
This report uses data from the second wave of TILDA data collection, which lasted from April 2012 to...
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to determine whether trajectories of older adults' alcoho...
Long-standing stereotypes portray Irish people as prone to use alcohol to excess. This review traces...
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to determine whether trajectories of older adults' alcoho...
Inequalities in the physical and psychological health of the first- and second-generation Irish subj...
A binge-drinking culture could be behind Northern Ireland’s high rates of heart disease, according t...
The HSE yesterday released a major report into the harm caused by alcohol in Ireland. The study m...
This report, from the Health Research Board, shows strong evidence of the increase of alcohol-relate...
The aim of this research was to examine drinking habits and experiences of drinking among men and wo...
Background: Alcohol consumption was assessed in English and Irish men and women aged 65 and over, li...