Changes in alcohol use during the covid-19 pandemic among young adults: The prospective effect of anxiety and depression

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Abstract

Health measures instantiated to reduce the spread of COVID-19 have imposed significant constraints for the population and impacted on drinking habits and mental health. This study longi-tudinally compared changes in alcohol consumption before and after the COVID-19 outbreak and the impact of sociodemographic and mental health variables on such changes among a community sample of young adults. Data were collected in the context of a larger, ongoing longitudinal study. The sample consisted of 305 young adults from Spain aged between 18 and 26 years (mean age = 21.27, (SD = 2.21), female = 53.4%; college students = 61.6%) who completed first (November-2019 and February-2020; i.e., before the outbreak of COVID-19) and second follow-up questionnaires (March 2021, a year after the COVID-19 outbreak). Alcohol use (quantity and drinking frequency), depression and anxiety symptoms were measured. Quantity and frequency of alcohol use decreased from the pre-to post-COVID-19 period. A decrease in drinking frequency was observed among college students, but not in noncollege peers. Although we found no effect of pre-COVID-19 anxiety on alcohol use changes, those with more depressive symptoms at the pre-COVID assessment were more resistant to decreasing their drinking quantity and frequency after the COVID-19 outbreak. This information will be of value when designing interventions aimed at reducing harmful alcohol use and highlights the role of mental health status when identifying high risk populations of young-adults during this, and future, public health crises.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Vera, B. D. V., Carmona-Márquez, J., Lozano-Rojas, Ó. M., Parrado-González, A., Vidal-Giné, C., Pautassi, R. M., & Fernández-Calderón, F. (2021). Changes in alcohol use during the covid-19 pandemic among young adults: The prospective effect of anxiety and depression. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 10(19). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10194468

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