Centre for Mental Health Research, Research School of Population Health, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
Research School of Psychology, College of Health and Medicine, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2022 Jul;46(7):1248-1257. doi: 10.1111/acer.14858. Epub 2022 May 24.
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in disruptions across many life domains. The distress associated with the pandemic itself, and with public health efforts to manage the outbreak, could result in increased alcohol use. This study aimed to quantify changes in alcohol use during the early stages of the pandemic and factors associated with different patterns of use.
Data were obtained from a longitudinal survey of a representative Australian adult sample (N = 1296, 50% female, M = 46.0) conducted from March to June 2020, during the first wave of the COVID-19 outbreak in Australia. Change in alcohol consumption was examined using Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Consumption (AUDIT-C) scores from waves one, three, five, and seven of the study, each 4 weeks apart. Factors associated with alcohol consumption were examined, including depression (PHQ-9) and anxiety (GAD-7) symptoms, health risk tolerance, stress and coping, work and social impairment (WSAS), COVID impacts, and sociodemographic variables. We tested changes in alcohol use across the full sample using a mixed effects repeated measure ANOVA model and a multinomial logistic regression to identify factors assessed at wave 1 that were independently associated with alcohol use.
There was no significant change in AUDIT-C scores across the study. For most participants, alcohol use did not increase during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia. COVID-19 exposure, higher perceived coping, depression symptoms, and male gender were associated with greater odds of increasing or elevated levels of alcohol use. Social changes, which included working from home, had mixed effects on alcohol consumption.
Although no evidence was found for increased alcohol use overall during the early months of the pandemic, several factors were associated with alcohol consumption at risky levels. Greater understanding of motivations for drinking across public and private contexts, along with targeted support for high-risk groups, could assist in reducing harm associated with alcohol consumption.
COVID-19 大流行导致许多生活领域受到干扰。大流行本身以及公共卫生部门为控制疫情所做的努力所带来的困扰,可能会导致饮酒量增加。本研究旨在量化大流行早期阶段饮酒量的变化以及与不同饮酒模式相关的因素。
数据来自于 2020 年 3 月至 6 月期间对澳大利亚代表性成年样本(N=1296,50%为女性,M=46.0)进行的一项纵向调查,当时澳大利亚正处于 COVID-19 爆发的第一波。使用研究的第一波、第三波、第五波和第七波的酒精使用障碍识别测试-饮酒量(AUDIT-C)得分来检查饮酒量的变化,每 4 周一次。使用 PHQ-9(抑郁)和 GAD-7(焦虑)症状、健康风险容忍度、压力和应对、工作和社交障碍(WSAS)、COVID 影响以及社会人口学变量来检查与饮酒相关的因素。我们使用混合效应重复测量方差分析模型和多项逻辑回归测试了整个样本中饮酒量的变化,以确定在波 1 评估的与饮酒量独立相关的因素。
在整个研究过程中,AUDIT-C 评分没有显著变化。对于大多数参与者来说,在澳大利亚 COVID-19 大流行的早期阶段,他们的饮酒量并没有增加。COVID-19 暴露、更高的感知应对能力、抑郁症状和男性性别与增加或升高的饮酒量的可能性更大相关。包括在家工作在内的社会变化对饮酒量有混合影响。
尽管在大流行的早期阶段没有发现总体饮酒量增加的证据,但有几个因素与高风险水平的饮酒量相关。更深入地了解公共和私人环境中饮酒的动机,以及为高风险群体提供有针对性的支持,可能有助于减少与饮酒相关的危害。