grant

Role of Health Care in Addressing Unhealthy Alcohol Use and Disparities among Aging Women

Organization KAISER FOUNDATION RESEARCH INSTITUTELocation Oakland, UNITED STATESPosted 16 Sept 2022Deadline 30 Jun 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY202565 and older65 or older65 years of age and older65 years of age or more65 years of age or older65+ years65+ years oldAccess to CareActive Follow-upAddressAdherenceAgeAge YearsAged 65 and OverAgingAlcohol Chemical ClassAlcohol DrinkingAlcohol abuseAlcohol consumptionAlcoholsAnti-Hypertensive AgentsAnti-Hypertensive DrugsAnti-HypertensivesAnxietyBenzodiazepine CompoundsBenzodiazepinesCaringClinicalComprehensive Health CareDataDiabetes MellitusDiscipline of obstetricsDisparitiesDisparityDrugsElectronic Health RecordEtOH abuseEtOH drinkingEtOH useExerciseFaceFundingGeriatricsGuidelinesGynecologyHealthHealth CareHealth Care ProvidersHealth Care SystemsHealth Care UtilizationHealth PersonnelHealth ServicesHealth Services AccessibilityHealth behaviorHealth systemHypertensionHypoglycemiaHypotensive AgentHypotensive DrugsInterpersonal ViolenceInterventionInterviewMedicalMedicationMedicineMental DepressionMethodsModelingNIAAANational Institute on Alcohol Abuse and AlcoholismObstetricsOlder PopulationOpiatesOpioidPainPainfulPatient Self-ReportPatientsPharmaceutical PreparationsPopulationPrimary CareProviderPsychiatric DiagnosisPsychiatryPublic HealthRecommendationRegistriesReportingResearchResearch PriorityRiskRisk FactorsRoleSelf-ReportServicesSpecialtySubgroupSystemTestingTimeTobaccoUnited StatesVascular Hypertensive DiseaseVascular Hypertensive DisorderWomanWorkabove age 65access to health servicesaccess to servicesaccess to treatmentaccessibility to health servicesactive followupaddictionaddictive disorderadverse consequenceadverse outcomeafter age 65age 65 and greaterage 65 and olderage 65 or olderageage groupage of 65 years onwardaged 65 and greateraged 65+aged groupaged groupsaged individualaged individualsaged peopleaged personaged personsaged populationaged populationsaged ≥65agesaging populationalcohol co-abusealcohol effectalcohol ingestionalcohol intakealcohol interventionalcohol misusealcohol problemalcohol product usealcohol screeningalcohol usealcohol use disorderalcoholic beverage consumptionalcoholic drink intakeanti-depressant agentanti-depressant drugsanti-depressantsanti-depressive agentsanti-hypertensionavailability of servicesbaby boomerbarrier to carebarrier to health carebarrier to treatmentbinge alcohol consumptionbinge drinkingbrief alcohol interventionbrief interventionbrief therapybrief treatmentcare accesscare seekingcare servicescare systemscausal diagramcausal modelchronic painclinical diagnosticsclinical riskcomprehensive caredepressiondiabetesdrinkingdrug/agentearly alcohol useearly onset alcohol useeffective interventionelectronic health care recordelectronic health medical recordelectronic health plan recordelectronic health registryelectronic medical health recordepisodic drinkingethanol abuseethanol consumptionethanol drinkingethanol effectethanol ingestionethanol intakeethanol misuseethanol product useethanol useethanol use disorderexperiencefacesfacialfollow upfollow-upfollowed upfollowupgeriatric medicinehazardous alcohol usehealth and care deliveryhealth care deliveryhealth care modelhealth care personnelhealth care service usehealth care service utilizationhealth care workerhealth delivery systemshealth providerhealth related behaviorhealth service accesshealth service usehealth service utilizationhealth services availabilityhealth services deliveryhealth workforcehigh blood pressurehigh riskholistic approachhuman old age (65+)hyperpiesiahyperpiesishypertensive diseasehypertensive disorderhypoglycemichypoglycemic episodesimprovedimproved outcomeindexinginnovateinnovationinnovativelicit opioidmedical diagnosticmedical personnelmedical specialtiesmembermenmid lifemid-lifemiddle agemiddle agedmidlifeobstacle to careobstacle to health careolder adultolder adulthoodolder groupsolder individualsolder personolder womenopiate medicationopioid medicationover 65 yearspopulation agingprescribed opiateprescribed opioidprescription opiateprescription opioidprimary care visitproblem alcohol useproblem drinkingproblematic alcohol consumptionproblematic alcohol usereduced alcohol usescreeningscreening programscreeningsservice availabilitysocial roletreatment accesstreatment providertreatment strategytrendunhealthy alcohol use≥65 years
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Full Description

Unhealthy alcohol use has increased significantly among aging women, raising their risk of serious alcohol related adverse consequences. At the same time, they face significant challenges accessing treatment. As the population of the United States ages, health care providers and systems will face an increasing number of aging women with alcohol problems, often with co-occurring health conditions that would improve with reduced drinking. Currently, there is limited research on the growing needs of this aging population, including on how some subgroups may be impacted by unhealthy alcohol use and on how to develop effective interventions so that the whole population can experience improved outcomes.

To understand these critical gaps and inform a holistic approach to alcohol-related healthcare, we propose a mixed-method study of over one million (1,298,009) aging women (≥age 50) in a large health care delivery system of over 4.5 million members. We leverage unique longitudinal electronic health record (EHR) data from a universal alcohol screening program in primary care, with an estimated 784,794 aging women regularly screened for unhealthy alcohol use at multiple primary care visits between 2014-2022. We integrate screening data with a NIAAA-funded alcohol registry that contains medical and psychiatric diagnoses, self-report health behaviors (e.g. tobacco, exercise, interpersonal violence screening), and health service encounters across clinical settings. Our approach is guided by a conceptual model based on the Andersen Model of Health Services Utilization.

We first identify trends and predictors of unhealthy alcohol use (defined as exceeding guidelines or alcohol use disorder) among aging women. Second, we test whether health services utilization (e.g., routine primary care visits, brief alcohol interventions, medications, and addiction and/or psychiatry treatment) is associated with reductions in alcohol use over time among all aging women who report unhealthy alcohol use and among subsets with co-occurring health conditions (e.g., chronic pain, depression/anxiety, diabetes and hypertension) and medication use (e.g., opioids). We use advanced causal modeling approaches to analyze hypothesized relationships, and to appropriately control for potential confounding and biases. For a deeper understanding of these patients’ needs and potential challenges to seeking care, we will conduct qualitative interviews with aging women who report unhealthy alcohol use and with providers who care for them in different medical settings (e.g. primary care, geriatrics, addiction medicine), which we triangulate with the quantitative data.

Findings will provide urgently needed evidence on how health services can impact unhealthy alcohol use, so that health care systems can better identify and treat this population through targeted interventions.

Grant Number: 5R01AA030297-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: CYNTHIA CAMPBELL

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