Surace Anthony, Munroe Cat, Martinez Priscilla
School of Public Health, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley California, United States of America.
Alcohol Research Group, Public Health Institute, Emeryville, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2025 Apr 2;20(4):e0319977. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0319977. eCollection 2025.
Evidence shows that alcohol use in the United States increased during the COVID-19 pandemic. This primarily quantitative work has not examined how the unique context of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. may have shaped motivations for alcohol use during this crisis. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted an analysis of qualitative data from in-depth interviews examining people's motivations for using alcohol during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Participants (N = 26) were derived from those who completed all three waves of the National Alcohol Survey COVID Cohort- a longitudinal population-based survey of non-institutionalized U.S. adults. Interviews were conducted from April-July 2022 over Zoom. Interview transcripts were analyzed iteratively via codebook thematic analysis.
Participants described how both contextual and individual level factors resulted in increased alcohol use. Contextual factors included reductions in barriers to alcohol use and increases in alcohol availability and accessibility. Individual level factors included using alcohol to regulate emotions (e.g., to alleviate boredom and as an end of day "reward") and to celebrate reconnecting with loved ones once social distancing restrictions began to ease.
Our results suggest that environmental forces may have interacted with individuals' emotions to shape alcohol use motivations during the COVID-19 pandemic. This work helps to contextualize quantitative research on changes in alcohol use observed during the COVID-19 pandemic. More research is needed to determine the long-term impacts of pandemic era changes in alcohol use. It is also necessary for future studies to examine how such impacts may manifest differently across the U.S. population (e.g., among racial/ethnic minority individuals).
有证据表明,美国的酒精使用量在新冠疫情期间有所增加。这项主要基于定量的研究尚未探讨美国新冠疫情的独特背景如何在这场危机中塑造了人们饮酒的动机。为了填补这一知识空白,我们对深度访谈的定性数据进行了分析,以研究人们在新冠疫情期间饮酒的动机。
参与者(N = 26)来自完成了全国酒精调查新冠队列所有三轮调查的人群,这是一项基于纵向人群的针对非机构化美国成年人的调查。访谈于2022年4月至7月通过Zoom进行。访谈记录通过编码本主题分析进行迭代分析。
参与者描述了背景因素和个人层面的因素如何导致酒精使用量增加。背景因素包括饮酒障碍的减少以及酒精可得性和可及性的增加。个人层面的因素包括用酒精调节情绪(例如缓解无聊以及作为一天结束时的“奖励”),以及在社交距离限制开始放宽后庆祝与亲人重新团聚。
我们的结果表明,在新冠疫情期间,环境因素可能与个人情绪相互作用,从而塑造了饮酒动机。这项工作有助于将新冠疫情期间观察到的酒精使用变化的定量研究置于具体情境中。需要更多研究来确定疫情时代酒精使用变化的长期影响。未来的研究还需要考察这些影响在美国不同人群(例如少数族裔个体)中可能如何不同地表现出来。