Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2023 Jul;84(4):489-498. doi: 10.15288/jsad.22-00262. Epub 2023 Feb 22.
There has been concern regarding increased substance use during the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly among young adults, but much of this concern stemmed from cross-sectional or short-term data collected early in the pandemic. This study followed a young adult community cohort throughout the first 1.5 years of the pandemic to examine longer-term trends/trajectories in alcohol and cannabis use behaviors.
Beginning before the COVID-19 pandemic (January 2020), 656 young adults completed up to eight surveys on substance use and other behaviors, which extended through August 2021. Multilevel spline growth models estimated changes in alcohol/cannabis use in three segments: (a) from pre-pandemic to April 2020, (b) from April 2020 to September/October 2020, and (c) from September/October 2020 to July/August 2021. Abstainers were removed from the analyses, yielding subsamples for alcohol models ( = 545; age = 25.6 years; 59.8% female) and cannabis models ( = 303; age = 25.6; 61.4% female).
Drinking frequency initially increased (3% per month), decreased in the second segment (4% per month), and plateaued in the final segment. Drinking quantity significantly decreased in all three segments: 4% per month in segment one, 3% per month in segment two, and 1% per month in the final segment. Cannabis frequency and quantity showed no significant changes across the first two segments, then significantly decreased in the final segment (3% and 6% per month, respectively). The significant changes for cannabis frequency/quantity were moderated by age, such that older participants had steeper decreases in the final segment.
Findings highlight that young adult alcohol and cannabis use generally declined across the first 1.5 years of the COVID-19 pandemic, contrary to widespread concerns.
人们一直担心在 COVID-19 大流行期间(尤其是在年轻人中)物质使用会增加,但这种担忧大多源于大流行早期收集的横断面或短期数据。本研究在 COVID-19 大流行的前 1.5 年中对一个年轻成年人社区队列进行了随访,以研究酒精和大麻使用行为的长期趋势/轨迹。
在 COVID-19 大流行之前(2020 年 1 月),656 名年轻人完成了多达八项关于物质使用和其他行为的调查,调查一直持续到 2021 年 8 月。多层次样条增长模型估计了酒精/大麻使用在三个阶段的变化:(a)从大流行前到 2020 年 4 月,(b)从 2020 年 4 月到 2020 年 9/10 月,(c)从 2020 年 9/10 月到 2021 年 7/8 月。在分析中去除了禁欲者,得出了酒精模型的子样本(=545;年龄=25.6 岁;59.8%为女性)和大麻模型的子样本(=303;年龄=25.6;61.4%为女性)。
饮酒频率最初每月增加 3%,第二个月每月减少 4%,最后一个月趋于平稳。在所有三个阶段,饮酒量都显著下降:第一个阶段每月下降 4%,第二个阶段每月下降 3%,最后一个阶段每月下降 1%。大麻的频率和数量在前两个阶段没有明显变化,然后在最后一个阶段明显下降(每月分别下降 3%和 6%)。大麻频率/数量的显著变化受到年龄的调节,即年龄较大的参与者在最后一个阶段下降幅度更大。
研究结果表明,在 COVID-19 大流行的前 1.5 年中,年轻成年人的酒精和大麻使用总体呈下降趋势,与普遍担忧的情况相反。