Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:4587...

Topic
Methods and Techniques
Author
Bell, Steven Britton, Annie
Langue
en
Editor

John Wiley and Sons Inc.

Category

Wiley-Blackwell Online Open

Year

2015

listing date

11/30/2023

Keywords
drinking consumption study age single life‐course decade‐based retrospective administered alcohol reliability
Metrics

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Retrospective measures of alcohol intake are becoming increasingly popular; however, the reliability of such measures remains uncertain.

This study assessed the reliability of a retrospective decade‐based life‐course alcohol consumption questionnaire, based on the standardized Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test–Consumption (AUDIT‐C) administered in older age in a well‐characterized cohort study.

DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS AND MEASUREMENTS: A retrospective alcohol life‐grid was administered to 5980 participants (72% male, mean age 70 years) in the Whitehall II study covering frequency of drinking, number of drinks in a typical drinking day and frequency of consuming six or more drinks in a single drinking occasion in the teens (16–19 years) through to the 80s.

A subsample of 385 individuals completed a repeat survey to determine test–retest reliability.

Retrospective measures were also compared with prospectively ascertained information and used to predict objectively measured systolic blood pressure to test their predictive validity.

FINDINGS: Across all decades of life, test–retest reliability was generally good (κ range = 0.62–0.78 for frequency, 0.55–0.62 for usual number of drinks and 0.57–0.65 for frequency of consuming six or more drinks in a single occasion).

The concordance between prospective and retrospective measures was consistently moderate to high.

The life‐grid method performed better than a single question in identifying life‐time abstainers.

Retrospective measures were also related to systolic blood pressure in the manner anticipated.

CONCLUSION: A retrospective decade‐based AUDIT‐C grid administered in older age provides a relatively reliable measure of alcohol consumption across the life‐course.

Bell, Steven,Britton, Annie, 2015, Reliability of a retrospective decade‐based life‐course alcohol consumption questionnaire administered in later life, John Wiley and Sons Inc.

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