This research aimed to estimate patterns of within-person changes in alcohol consumption among cohorts of aging adults, and assess key predictors of individual differences in alcohol use trajectories.
Data came from 3,617 adults who were interviewed up to four times between 1986 and 2002. Multilevel multinomial logit models estimated the odds of abstinence and heavy drinking relative to moderate drinking.
The odds of abstinence increased, and the odds of heavy drinking decreased during the study period.
Significant cohort variations around these trends were observed, such as current older adults experiencing faster increases in abstinence than younger adults.
However, extrapolations from these patterns suggest that current younger adults are more likely to be abstinent, and less likely to be heavy drinkers in late life than current cohorts of older adults.
Aging-related drinking trajectories, as well as cohort differences in these patterns, are associated with time-varying health, social, and lifestyle factors.
Drinking behavior in our aging population appears to be on a relatively promising course, perhaps reflecting the effectiveness of public health efforts to reduce drinking behavior.