Gyamerah Akua O, Dunham Alexandrea E, Ikeda Janet, Canizares Andy C, McFarland Willi, Wilson Erin C, Santos Glenn-Milo
Department of Community Health and Health Behavior, School of Public Health and Health Professions, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York, United States of America.
Department of Community Health Systems, School of Nursing, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Dec 31;19(12):e0316096. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0316096. eCollection 2024.
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated prevalence of alcohol use and violence, including gender-based violence (GBV); however, little is understood about the pandemic's impact on the relationship between the two. Data were collected from January 2021-April 2023 with adults who drink alcohol (N = 565) in the San Francisco Bay Area. Questions assessed prevalence of heavy alcohol use (≥4 drinks on one occasion ≥4 times a month) in the past 3 months and violence/GBV exposure before and during the pandemic. Logistic regression examined associations between violence and alcohol use. Overall, participants reported heavy alcohol use (73.7%), strong desire for alcohol (53.3%), ever experiencing violence (71.6%), and GBV (20.5%). During the pandemic, participants reported experiencing violence (26.1%), more violence than usual (13.8%), GBV (8.9%), and drinking more alcohol (43.7%). People who experienced violence during the pandemic had significantly greater odds of reporting heavy alcohol use (OR = 1.76, p = 0.05) and drinking more during the pandemic than usual (OR = 2.04, p<0.01). Those who reported experiencing more violence during the pandemic than usual had significantly greater odds of reporting heavy alcohol use (OR = 2.32, p = 0.04) and drinking more during the pandemic (OR = 2.23, p<0.01). People who experienced GBV during the pandemic reported a significantly stronger desire for alcohol (OR = 2.44; p = 0.02) than those not exposed. Alcohol-related harms increased over the COVID-19 pandemic, including increased violence/GBV, alcohol use, and an elevated desire to use alcohol among those who experienced violence during the pandemic. Future pandemic preparedness efforts must prioritize violence prevention strategies and adapt alcohol harm reduction, recovery, and treatment programs to pandemic conditions.
新冠疫情加剧了酒精使用和暴力行为的流行,包括基于性别的暴力行为(GBV);然而,对于疫情对两者之间关系的影响,人们了解甚少。研究数据收集于2021年1月至2023年4月,研究对象为旧金山湾区饮酒的成年人(N = 565)。问题评估了过去3个月中重度饮酒(每月至少4次,每次至少4杯)的流行情况以及疫情前和疫情期间暴力行为/基于性别的暴力行为暴露情况。逻辑回归分析研究了暴力行为与酒精使用之间的关联。总体而言,参与者报告有重度饮酒行为(73.7%)、对酒精有强烈渴望(53.3%)、曾经历过暴力行为(71.6%)以及经历过基于性别的暴力行为(20.5%)。在疫情期间,参与者报告经历过暴力行为(26.1%)、暴力行为比平时更多(13.8%)、经历过基于性别的暴力行为(8.9%)以及饮酒量增加(43.7%)。在疫情期间经历过暴力行为的人报告重度饮酒的几率显著更高(OR = 1.76,p = 0.05),且在疫情期间饮酒量比平时更多的几率也显著更高(OR = 2.04,p<0.01)。那些报告在疫情期间经历的暴力行为比平时更多的人报告重度饮酒的几率显著更高(OR = 2.32,p = 0.04),且在疫情期间饮酒量更多的几率也显著更高(OR = 2.23,p<0.01)。在疫情期间经历过基于性别的暴力行为的人报告对酒精的渴望明显更强(OR = 2.44;p = 0.02),高于未经历过的人。在新冠疫情期间,与酒精相关的危害有所增加,包括暴力行为/基于性别的暴力行为增加、酒精使用增加以及在疫情期间经历过暴力行为的人对酒精的渴望增强。未来的疫情防范工作必须优先考虑暴力预防策略,并使酒精危害减少、康复和治疗项目适应疫情形势。