Hill MacEachern Kate, Venugopal Jeya, Varin Mélanie, Weeks Murray, Hussain Nousin, Baker Melissa M
Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can. 2021 Nov 10;41(11):331-339. doi: 10.24095/hpcdp.41.11.03. Epub 2021 Sep 27.
Increased alcohol and cannabis consumption and related harms have been reported since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Existing evidence shows that substance use and related harms differ by gender. Yet, no Canadian study has applied a gendered lens to alcohol and cannabis consumption use during this time. Our objectives were to (1) provide gender-specific prevalence estimates of self-reported increased alcohol and cannabis use; and (2) examine gender-specific associations between sociodemographic and mental health variables and alcohol and cannabis use.
Using data from the Survey on COVID-19 and Mental Health, we calculated nationally representative, gender-specific prevalence estimates and disaggregated them by sociodemographic and mental health variables. Four logistic regression models were used to assess the likelihood of self-reported increased alcohol and cannabis use.
The prevalence of self-reported increase in alcohol use (16.2% women; 15.2% men) and cannabis use (4.9% women; 5.8% men) did not differ by gender. For both genders, income, racialized group membership, working in the past week, being a parent/legal guardian of a child aged under 18 and screening positive for depression and anxiety were associated with increased alcohol use. Men and women who were between the ages of 18 to 44, screened positive for depression, or both, were more likely to report increased cannabis use. For women, education was significantly associated with increased alcohol use. For men, being a parent/legal guardian was significantly associated with lower odds of increased cannabis use.
Sociodemographic factors, as well as depression and anxiety, were similarly associated with increased alcohol and cannabis use for both men and women in the second wave of the pandemic.
自新冠疫情开始以来,酒精和大麻消费增加以及相关危害的报告不断出现。现有证据表明,物质使用及其相关危害存在性别差异。然而,在此期间,加拿大尚无研究从性别视角审视酒精和大麻消费情况。我们的目标是:(1)提供自我报告的酒精和大麻使用增加情况的性别特异性患病率估计值;(2)研究社会人口统计学和心理健康变量与酒精和大麻使用之间的性别特异性关联。
利用新冠疫情与心理健康调查的数据,我们计算了具有全国代表性的性别特异性患病率估计值,并按社会人口统计学和心理健康变量进行分类。使用四个逻辑回归模型来评估自我报告的酒精和大麻使用增加的可能性。
自我报告的酒精使用增加(女性为16.2%;男性为15.2%)和大麻使用增加(女性为4.9%;男性为5.8%)的患病率在性别上没有差异。对于两性而言,收入、种族群体成员身份、过去一周工作、是18岁以下儿童的父母/法定监护人以及抑郁和焦虑筛查呈阳性都与酒精使用增加有关。年龄在18至44岁之间、抑郁筛查呈阳性或两者皆有的男性和女性更有可能报告大麻使用增加。对于女性,教育程度与酒精使用增加显著相关。对于男性,作为父母/法定监护人与大麻使用增加几率较低显著相关。
在疫情第二波期间,社会人口统计学因素以及抑郁和焦虑与男性和女性酒精和大麻使用增加的关联相似。