Department of Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2021 Apr;45(4):854-863. doi: 10.1111/acer.14572. Epub 2021 Mar 23.
There has been widespread concern that the COVID-19 pandemic may be a high-risk time for alcohol use among heavy drinking populations such as college students. Initial efforts to evaluate changes in college drinking have not yet accounted for typical drinking patterns within a semester.
To fill this gap, we evaluated how college student drinking patterns changed with the onset of restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic during spring 2020 relative to spring 2018 and 2019. Participants were 1,365 college students aged 19 and older, including 895 students who reported past-month alcohol use. Daily drinking data were extracted from an online Timeline Followback survey.
Negative binomial hurdle models revealed that, with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in spring 2020, college student drinkers did not increase their drinking frequency as was typical in late spring semester, and the number of drinks per occasion declined substantially (28% reduction), greater than the change observed from early to late spring 2018 (3% reduction) or spring 2019 (8% increase). This reduction in drinking quantity in spring 2020 was larger for college student drinkers who moved residences because of the pandemic (49% reduction) than students who did not move (21% reduction). Perceptions in pandemic-related changes in drinking also revealed that 83.5% of college student drinkers self-reported that their drinking stayed the same or decreased.
Findings suggest that, on average, college students drank less-not more-during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and highlight the importance of living situation in college student drinking behavior. More research is needed to assess alcohol use in other universities, as this information could be utilized in norms-based interventions to further reduce drinking in students who remain at risk.
人们普遍担心,COVID-19 大流行可能是酗酒人群(如大学生)饮酒风险较高的时期。最初评估大学生饮酒变化的努力尚未考虑到一个学期内的典型饮酒模式。
为了填补这一空白,我们评估了与 COVID-19 大流行相关的限制措施在 2020 年春季相对于 2018 年和 2019 年春季对大学生饮酒模式的影响。参与者包括 1365 名年龄在 19 岁及以上的大学生,其中 895 名学生报告过去一个月有饮酒行为。每日饮酒数据从在线时间线回溯调查中提取。
负二项式障碍模型显示,随着 COVID-19 大流行在 2020 年春季的爆发,大学生饮酒者并没有像春季学期后期那样增加饮酒频率,每次饮酒的量也大幅下降(减少 28%),大于从春季早期到晚期 2018 年(减少 3%)或 2019 年(增加 8%)的变化。由于疫情而搬家的大学生饮酒者(减少 49%)比没有搬家的学生(减少 21%),这种春季 2020 年饮酒量的减少幅度更大。与大流行相关的饮酒变化的认知也表明,83.5%的大学生饮酒者自我报告称他们的饮酒量保持不变或减少。
研究结果表明,大学生在 COVID-19 大流行爆发期间平均饮酒量减少,而非增加,这突出了大学生饮酒行为中居住情况的重要性。需要进一步研究其他大学的饮酒情况,以便在基于规范的干预措施中利用这些信息,进一步减少仍处于风险中的学生的饮酒量。