Department of Psychology, University of Bath, 10 West, Bath, BA2 7AY, UK.
Addiction and Mental Health Group (AIM), Department of Psychology, University of Bath, Bath, UK.
BMC Psychiatry. 2022 Jun 21;22(1):417. doi: 10.1186/s12888-022-04006-x.
Excessive alcohol use is common in young people and is associated with a range of adverse consequences including an increased risk of depression. Alcohol interventions are known to be effective in young people, however it is not known if these interventions can also improve depression.
To investigate whether psychosocial interventions principally targeting excessive alcohol use in young people reduce depression symptoms compared to controls.
We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of controlled intervention trials, that measured depression symptoms at follow-up. We used a generic inverse variance random effect meta-analysis to pool the standardised mean difference in change in depression symptoms from baseline to follow-up between intervention and control arms. We used I to measure heterogeneity, the Cochrane tool for randomised trials to assess risk of bias, and Egger's tests to assess small study bias.
APA PsycNET, PubMed, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Web of Science, Embase (including MEDLINE), and clinicaltrials.gov were searched for relevant studies published from inception to December 2020. Reference lists of studies were also searched, and authors contacted where articles presented insufficient data.
Intervention studies that primarily targeted existing excessive alcohol use in young people (aged 10 to 24) and assessed depression outcomes at baseline with a minimum of four-week follow-up.
Five studies were included in the meta-analysis. Interventions targeting excessive alcohol use were associated with a reduction in depression symptoms from baseline to follow-up when compared to control, standardised mean difference = - 0.26, and 95% confidence interval [- 0.41, - 0.12], p < .001.
This study found evidence that interventions primarily targeting excessive alcohol use can reduce depression symptoms in young people. However, this finding should be taken with caution given concerns about risk of bias in all studies. More research is needed to examine whether these findings generalise beyond populations of undergraduate students primarily living in high income countries.
PROSPERO registration number: CRD42020177260 .
年轻人过度饮酒较为常见,与一系列不良后果相关,包括抑郁风险增加。已知针对年轻人的酒精干预措施有效,但尚不清楚这些干预措施是否也能改善抑郁。
调查主要针对年轻人过度饮酒的心理社会干预措施与对照组相比是否能降低抑郁症状。
我们对对照干预试验进行了系统评价和荟萃分析,这些试验在随访时测量了抑郁症状。我们使用通用倒数方差随机效应荟萃分析,来汇总干预组和对照组从基线到随访期间抑郁症状变化的标准化均数差。我们使用 I ² 来衡量异质性,使用 Cochrane 工具评估随机试验的偏倚风险,使用 Egger 检验评估小样本偏倚。
APA PsycNET、PubMed、Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库、Web of Science、Embase(包括 MEDLINE)和 clinicaltrials.gov 从成立到 2020 年 12 月搜索了相关研究。还搜索了研究的参考文献列表,并在文章提供的数据不足时联系了作者。
主要针对年轻人(10 至 24 岁)现有过度饮酒行为的干预研究,且在基线评估抑郁结果,随访时间至少为四周。
荟萃分析纳入了 5 项研究。与对照组相比,针对过度饮酒的干预措施与随访时抑郁症状的降低相关,标准化均数差= -0.26,95%置信区间[-0.41,-0.12],p < 0.001。
本研究发现,主要针对过度饮酒的干预措施可降低年轻人的抑郁症状。然而,由于所有研究均存在偏倚风险,因此应谨慎对待这一发现。需要进一步研究以检验这些发现是否可以推广到主要居住在高收入国家的大学生群体以外的人群。
PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42020177260。