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Reasons for drinking wine and other beverages – comparison across motives in older adults

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJWR.S33323

Keywords: drinking behavior, wine and drinking motives, healthy drinking, wine and health

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Abstract:

sons for drinking wine and other beverages – comparison across motives in older adults Original Research (2050) Total Article Views Authors: Moran CC, Saliba AJ Published Date August 2012 Volume 2012:4 Pages 25 - 32 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJWR.S33323 Received: 26 April 2012 Accepted: 03 July 2012 Published: 27 August 2012 Carmen C Moran, Anthony J Saliba School of Psychology, Charles Sturt University, Wagga Wagga, NSW, Australia Objectives: Health as a positive reason for drinking wine (eg, antioxidant content) has scant empirical data to inform policy. This study attempted to examine that motive by including health as one of six motives for drinking, along with measures of problem drinking (the Cut-down, Annoyed, Guilty, Eye-opener [CAGE] questionnaire) in an older adult population. Design: Four drinking motives (enhancement, coping, social, and conformity), plus taste and health were included within a larger national telephone survey on drinking behaviors. We also recorded beverage preference. Results: In this analysis, 705 participants drank a preferred beverage. Taste was the most highly endorsed motive. Just under one quarter of the sample endorsed health as a positive reason for drinking. After controlling for age, sex, and preferred alcoholic beverage, the internal psychological motives of enhancement and coping predicted CAGE scores, but external motives did not. Believing that alcohol is healthy was a negative predictor of CAGE scores. Our results showed a different pattern to those with younger drinkers reported in previous research. Our older group was less likely to drink for social reasons and internal motives were predictive of CAGE scores. Conclusion: A motives-based approach to managing problem drinking will need to take account of a wider range of age-related motives. Based on the current data, there is little reason to suspect drinking wine for health reasons is associated with potential problem drinking.

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