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RESEARCH
General
Health
ALCOHOL
ABUSE
Senior-citizen drinking problems
labeled 'invisible epidemic'
Mark Reutter,
Business Editor
(217) 333-0568; mreutter@uiuc.edu
5/1/02
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. --
It's being called an "invisible epidemic" by some health care
experts -- the growing number of senior citizens with out-of-control
drinking problems.
According to "Inebriated Elders," a just-published article
in the Elder Law Journal at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
as many as one in six Americans 60 and older are overdependent on alcohol.
Twenty percent of the elderly who are admitted to psychiatric wards
show symptoms of alcoholism or substance abuse. By some estimates, alcoholism
today rivals heart attacks as a killer of senior citizens.
A growing type of abuser is the "late-onset alcoholic," according
to author Susan Abrams, an Illinois law graduate who is the clerk for
U.S. District Judge Harold A. Baker in Central Illinois. Such a person
shows no sign of alcoholism until major physical or lifestyle changes,
such as health problems, death of a spouse, financial worries, depression
or sleeplessness, trigger overdrinking after age 50.
Women are more prone than men to late-onset alcoholism, Abrams reported,
and women also develop alcohol-related health problems more quickly.
Equally serious is the problem of elderly women who "often suffer
from shame and embarrassment, and their families often fail to help
because of denial or desperation." Moving an alcoholic to a retirement
community may actually increase the problem because the social activities
provide more opportunities to drink.
Prescription and over-the-counter drug abuse also increase with advancing
age. While some seniors turn to alcohol, others turn to antidepressant
medications. Fifty percent of all sedatives are used by people over
the age of 59. One out of six Medicare recipients is prescribed medication
inappropriately, according to a survey of elderly women.
One of the most serious aspects of the "invisible epidemic,"
wrote Abrams, is the inability (or unwillingness) of doctors and hospitals
to diagnose the problem. The Federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration has characterized substance abuse as "under-estimated,
under-identified, under-diagnosed and under-treated" among the
elderly.
Only a tiny percentage of primary care physicians consider alcohol abuse
when a patient shows symptoms typically associated with the problems,
a 1998 study found.
Even when properly diagnosed, the standard methods of treatment of substance
abuse may be ineffective for elderly sufferers. Effective withdrawal
from alcohol or drug dependence is a psychological as well as physical
process, greatly enhanced by a spouse and other family members helping
the abuser. But the elderly often do not have a support system within
reach after their children move elsewhere and longtime friends leave
the neighborhood.
Turning to the government for help is not a viable alternative. Medicare
will cover the cost of alcohol detoxification, but will not cover a
hospital stay for rehabilitation if a less expensive setting is available.
Government-reimbursed alcohol treatment rarely lasts more than two weeks,
Abrams reported.
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