Neuroscience of Addiction (NofA) Laboratory, Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
The Amsterdam Brain and Cognition Center (ABC), University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Addiction. 2021 Aug;116(8):2104-2115. doi: 10.1111/add.15387. Epub 2021 Jan 12.
Lockdown measures aimed at limiting the number of infections and deaths from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have introduced substantial psychosocial stressors in everyday life. We aimed to investigate the influence of the Dutch lockdown on cannabis use and cannabis use disorder (CUD) and investigate relations with change in mental wellbeing and experienced psychosocial stressors during the lockdown.
Explorative longitudinal baseline-, pre- and during lockdown survey study.
The Netherlands, on-line between January 2019 and May 2020.
Community sample of 120 monthly to daily cannabis users and reference group of 63 non-using controls.
Change in cannabis use and CUD symptom severity from baseline to pre- to post-lockdown. Change in cannabis use motives, mental health, quality of social relationships and job status from pre- to post-lockdown.
In cannabis users, lockdown related to increased cannabis use [B = 1.96, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.26-3.66, P = 0.024], but not CUD symptom severity. Cannabis users experienced 30% job loss and increased loneliness [P < 0.001, Bayes factor (BF) > 100], while contact with partners (P = 0.005, BF = 8.21) and families improved (P < 0.001, BF = 19.73), with no differences between cannabis users and control. Generally, mental health problems (all Ps > 0.277, all BF < 0.139) did not change, but individual differences were significant and severity of cannabis use pre-lockdown, COVID-19-related worries, change in anxiety, expansion motives, social motives and family contact all uniquely related to variance in change in cannabis use or CUD.
While cannabis use among daily cannabis users in the Netherlands increased at the group level during the period of COVID-19 lockdown, the effect of the first months of lockdown on cannabis use disorder severity and mental wellbeing varied significantly among individual daily cannabis users.
旨在限制 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)感染和死亡人数的封锁措施给日常生活带来了巨大的心理社会压力。我们旨在研究荷兰封锁对大麻使用和大麻使用障碍(CUD)的影响,并调查封锁期间心理健康变化和经历的心理社会压力源与大麻使用变化之间的关系。
探索性纵向基线、预封锁和封锁期间调查研究。
荷兰,2019 年 1 月至 2020 年 5 月在线进行。
每月至每日使用大麻的 120 名社区样本和 63 名非使用者对照组。
从基线到预封锁到封锁期间大麻使用和 CUD 症状严重程度的变化。从预封锁到封锁期间大麻使用动机、心理健康、社会关系质量和工作状况的变化。
在大麻使用者中,与封锁相关的大麻使用增加[B = 1.96,95%置信区间(CI)= 0.26-3.66,P = 0.024],但 CUD 症状严重程度没有增加。大麻使用者中有 30%失业并感到孤独[P < 0.001,贝叶斯因子(BF)> 100],而与伴侣(P = 0.005,BF = 8.21)和家庭的接触有所改善(P < 0.001,BF = 19.73),大麻使用者和对照组之间没有差异。一般来说,心理健康问题(所有 P 值均大于 0.277,所有 BF 值均小于 0.139)均未发生变化,但个体差异显著,并且封锁前大麻使用的严重程度、与 COVID-19 相关的担忧、焦虑变化、扩展动机、社会动机和家庭接触均与大麻使用变化或 CUD 变化的变化有独特的关系。
虽然荷兰每日大麻使用者在 COVID-19 封锁期间大麻使用量在群体水平上有所增加,但封锁的头几个月对大麻使用障碍严重程度和心理健康的影响在个体每日大麻使用者中差异显著。