Robinson Eric, Jones Andrew
Institute of Population Health, Department of Psychology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
JMIR Form Res. 2023 Mar 3;7:e40518. doi: 10.2196/40518.
It is unclear whether heavy alcohol use and associated hangover symptoms changed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Due to a lack of available accurate and nonretrospective self-reported data, it is difficult to directly assess hangover symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This study aimed to examine whether alcohol-induced hangover-related internet searches (eg, "how to cure a hangover?") increased, decreased, or remained the same in England before versus during the COVID-19 pandemic (2020-2021) and during periods of national lockdown. Secondary aims were to examine if hangover-related internet searches in England differed compared to a country that did not impose similar COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.
Using historical data from Google Trends for England, we compared the relative search volume (RSV) of hangover-related searches in the years before (2016-2019) versus during the COVID-19 pandemic (2020-2021), as well as in periods of national lockdown versus the same periods in 2016-2019. We also compared the RSV of hangover-related searches during the same time frames in a European country that did not introduce national COVID-19 lockdowns at the beginning of the pandemic (Sweden). Hangover-related search terms were identified through consultation with a panel of alcohol researchers and a sample from the general public. Statistical analyses were preregistered prior to data collection.
There was no overall significant difference in the RSV of hangover-related terms in England during 2016-2019 versus 2020-2021 (P=.10; robust d=0.02, 95% CI 0.00-0.03). However, during national lockdowns, searches for hangover-related terms were lower, particularly during the first national lockdown in England (P<.001; d=.19, 95% CI 0.16-0.24; a 44% relative decrease). In a comparison country that did not introduce a national lockdown in the early stages of the pandemic (Sweden), there was no significant decrease in hangover-related searches during the same time period (P=.06). However, across both England and Sweden, during later periods of COVID-19 restrictions in 2020 and 2021, the RSV of hangover-related terms was lower than that in the same periods during 2016-2019. Exploratory analyses revealed that national monthly variation in alcohol sales both before and during the COVID-19 pandemic were positively correlated with the frequency of hangover-related searches, suggesting that changes in hangover-related searches may act as a proxy for changes in alcohol consumption.
Hangover-related internet searches did not differ before versus during the COVID-19 pandemic in England but did reduce during periods of national lockdown. Further research is required to confirm how changes in hangover-related search volume relate to heavy episodic alcohol use.
Open Science Framework 2Y86E; https://osf.io/2Y86E.
目前尚不清楚大量饮酒及相关宿醉症状是否因新冠疫情而发生了变化。由于缺乏准确且非回顾性的自我报告数据,很难直接评估新冠疫情期间的宿醉症状。
本研究旨在调查在新冠疫情期间(2020 - 2021年)及全国封锁期间,英格兰与疫情前(2016 - 2019年)相比,酒精引起的与宿醉相关的网络搜索(如“如何治愈宿醉?”)是增加、减少还是保持不变。次要目的是研究与未实施类似新冠疫情封锁限制的国家相比,英格兰与宿醉相关的网络搜索是否存在差异。
利用谷歌趋势提供的英格兰历史数据,我们比较了疫情前(2016 - 2019年)与新冠疫情期间(2020 - 2021年)以及全国封锁期间与2016 - 2019年同期相比,与宿醉相关搜索的相对搜索量(RSV)。我们还比较了在疫情初期未实施全国新冠疫情封锁的欧洲国家(瑞典)在同一时间范围内与宿醉相关搜索的RSV。通过与一组酒精研究人员和普通公众样本协商,确定了与宿醉相关的搜索词。在数据收集之前对统计分析进行了预注册。
2016 - 2019年与2020 - 2021年期间,英格兰与宿醉相关词汇的RSV总体上没有显著差异(P = 0.10;稳健d = 0.02,95%置信区间0.00 - 0.03)。然而,在全国封锁期间,与宿醉相关词汇的搜索量较低,尤其是在英格兰首次全国封锁期间(P < 0.001;d = 0.19,95%置信区间0.16 - 0.24;相对下降44%)。在疫情初期未实施全国封锁的对比国家(瑞典),同期与宿醉相关的搜索量没有显著下降(P = 0.06)。然而,在英格兰和瑞典,在2020年和2021年新冠疫情限制的后期,与宿醉相关词汇的RSV低于2016 - 2019年同期。探索性分析表明,新冠疫情之前和期间全国每月酒精销售额的变化与与宿醉相关搜索的频率呈正相关,这表明与宿醉相关搜索的变化可能是酒精消费变化的一个指标。
在英格兰,与宿醉相关的网络搜索在新冠疫情之前和期间没有差异,但在全国封锁期间有所减少。需要进一步研究以确认与宿醉相关搜索量的变化与大量饮酒之间的关系。
开放科学框架2Y86E;https://osf.io/2Y86E 。