Wednesday, 26 September 2012

Joan Bakewell on older drinkers

Joan Bakewell presents Panorama: Old, Drunk and Disorderly? BBC One, Monday, 10 September at 19:30 BST Then available in the UK on the BBC iPlayer I have just returned from holidaying in France with a car boot rattling with the sound of a very nice Muscadet. So, yes, I am a sure fire target for the health police.

I was put through my paces. This meant keeping a record of my own drinking patterns for a month.

It was during July - a season of chilled white wine, sunny days with a glass of something refreshing in hand, parties in gardens, on terraces, by the sea.

Government guidelines for women allow a daily limit of 3 units a day.

But I didn't always refuse a top-up or even the second drink that would take me to that limit.

And when comparing my habits to the advice handed down, it did make me query who the people are who draw up these rules. And what do they know of our real lives?

More seriously what do they know of the dilemmas of older people and the problems they confront as they face old age?

Loneliness, isolation

The loss of friends, personal bereavement, sudden redundancy or retirement, loneliness and isolation can all feel like good reasons to reach for the bottle. I met several such people and heard their stories.

There is 73-year-old Barbara Smith who told me how the death of her husband played a big part in causing her drinking to spiral out of control.

Her drinking reached as much as a bottle of wine every day - around four times the government's recommended limit.

And Barbara, who is now getting support to help her cut down her drinking, is not alone. Experts advise that people refrain from drinking on at least two days a week, yet more over-65s are drinking six or seven days a week than any other age group.

Continue reading the main storyUnits of alcohol Bottle (75cl) of wine - 10 units Small (125ml) glass of wine - 1.5 units Standard (175ml) glass of wine - 2.1 units Large (250ml) glass of wine - 3 units Pint of weaker (3.6%) beer - 2 units Pint of stronger (5.2%) beer - 3 units Bottle (330ml) of beer - 1.7 units Can (440ml) of beer - 2 units Alcopop bottle (275ml) - 1.5 units Small (25ml) shot of spirits - 1 unit Large (35ml) shot of spirits - 1.4 units

Source: NHS

Alcohol units guide I also met a number of qualified professionals who are helping snatch older problem drinkers back from the brink, and add years to their lives.

In Hampshire, the local Primary Care Trust has the highest number of hospital admissions of over-65s in England for alcohol-related problems.

They have responded by setting up a specialist alcohol team at the Queen Alexandra Hospital in Portsmouth to help identify and tackle the issue.

For many elderly people drinking at home, it is quite easy to drink more than they realise and to creep above safe limits says Dr Richard Aspinall, a consultant hepatologist in Portsmouth.

"We think of a very visible social disorder, consequences of young people binge drinking on a Saturday night in our town centres, but what's much more hidden is quiet, below the radar drinking at home."

He and others are both wise and sympathetic to the issue of older people and drinking. They do not disapprove of social drinking, but don't want it to become an addiction.

I'll be keeping their phone numbers to hand. You just never know what the years will hold!

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