Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
Soc Sci Med. 2023 Jun;326:115925. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115925. Epub 2023 Apr 25.
The first COVID-19 lockdown impacted the social life and behaviors of university students, such as alcohol use. While previous studies have reported changes in students' alcohol use during the lockdown, knowledge of risk groups like binge drinkers is limited.
The purpose of this study is to investigate how the first lockdown impacted the alcohol use of university students who were regular binge drinkers before the lockdown.
Cross-sectional data were used to explore self-reported changes in alcohol use and associated psychosocial effects in regular binge drinking versus regular drinking university students (N = 7355) during the first COVID-19 lockdown (Spring 2020) in the Netherlands.
University students generally drank less alcohol and reduced binge drinking behaviors during the lockdown. Being a binge drinker who increased/maintained alcohol use, or a regular drinker who increased, was associated with older age, fewer servings of alcohol per week before COVID-19, higher contact with friends, and not living with parents. Among regular binge drinkers, men increased their alcohol use during the lockdown significantly more than women. Among regular drinkers, those with high depressive symptoms and low resilience had increased alcohol use.
These findings give insight into significant changes in drinking behaviors among university students during the first COVID-19 lockdown. More importantly, it underscores the need to reckon vulnerable students considering drinking type and associated psychosocial variables for increasing or maintaining higher alcohol use during societal stress periods. In the present study, an unexpected at-risk group emerged among regular drinkers who increased alcohol use during the lockdown in association with their mental state (i.e., depression and resilience). As the COVID-19 pandemic, and the possibility of similar scenarios in the future, is still present in the current student life, specific preventive strategies and interventions should be targeted accordingly.
首次新冠疫情封锁对大学生的社会生活和行为产生了影响,例如饮酒行为。尽管之前的研究报告了封锁期间学生饮酒行为的变化,但对嗜酒者等风险群体的了解有限。
本研究旨在调查首次封锁对封锁前经常暴饮的大学生的饮酒行为有何影响。
使用横断面数据,在荷兰首次 COVID-19 封锁期间(2020 年春季),调查了 7355 名经常暴饮大学生和经常适量饮酒大学生自我报告的饮酒变化及其相关心理社会影响。
大学生普遍在封锁期间饮酒量减少,暴饮行为减少。经常暴饮且增加/维持饮酒量或经常适量饮酒但增加饮酒量的大学生,其特征为年龄较大、COVID-19 之前每周饮酒量较少、与朋友接触较多且与父母同住。在经常暴饮的大学生中,男性在封锁期间的饮酒量显著增加,而女性则没有。在经常适量饮酒的大学生中,抑郁症状严重和抗压能力低的人饮酒量增加。
这些发现深入了解了大学生在首次 COVID-19 封锁期间饮酒行为的显著变化。更重要的是,它强调了在社会压力时期,需要考虑考虑到饮酒类型和相关的心理社会变量,关注可能增加或维持较高饮酒量的脆弱学生。在本研究中,一个意想不到的风险群体出现在经常适量饮酒的大学生中,他们在封锁期间增加了饮酒量,这与他们的精神状态(即抑郁和抗压能力)有关。由于 COVID-19 大流行及其在未来可能出现的类似情况仍存在于当前的学生生活中,应相应地制定特定的预防策略和干预措施。