Alcohol study: middle-aged women drink more often than daughters

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13% of Australian women aged 45 to 59 average more than two drinks a day, increasing their risk of alcohol-related illness

Women drinking wine
Middle-aged Australian women tend to abandon binge drinking, but they are drinking less more frequently. Photograph: Cathal Mcnaughton/PA

Middle-aged Australian women drink more alcohol than any other age group, according to a Queensland University of Technology researcher.

But it’s the frequency with which they drink that has Queensland researcher Hanna Watling worried – perhaps a daily glass of wine at dinner, followed by a tipple in front of the TV.

She says about 13% in the 45 to 59 age group average more than two drinks a day. That’s more than younger women.

This significantly increases their risk of death from alcohol-related illness. “As women age we see a change in their drinking patterns,” Watling says.

They tend to abandon binge drinking, but drink less alcohol more frequently than any other age group. Now Watling is conducting a study to find out why. Her preliminary findings show alcohol has becomes a greater part of everyday life as women age, “for example, having a wine with dinner or in front of the TV”.

Alcohol also becomes a way of dealing with the stresses of a busy life, family worries, work pressures or social commitments, says Watling of the Queensland University of Technology.

“What we are concerned about is that those women, who drink moderately but often, may end up consuming a larger volume of alcohol than those who drink heavily but less frequently.”

This puts them at risk of a long-term problems such as liver and heart diseases, high blood pressure and increased risk of cancer.