Differential impacts of perceived social support on alcohol and cannabis use in young adults: lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic

IF 0.9 Q3 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Michelle Blumberg, Lindsay Lo, Geoffrey Harrison, Alison Dodwell, Samantha Irwin, Mary Olmstead
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Coronavirus (COVID-19) lockdowns provided a unique opportunity to examine how changes in the social environment impact mental health and wellbeing. We addressed this issue by assessing how perceived social support across COVID-19 restrictions alters alcohol and cannabis use in emerging adults, a population vulnerable to adverse outcomes of substance use. Four hundred sixty-three young adults in Canada and the United States completed online questionnaires for three retrospective timepoints: Pre-Covid, Lockdown and Eased Restrictions. Sociodemographic factors, perceived social support, and substance use were assessed. Overall, alcohol use decreased while cannabis use increased during Lockdown. Interestingly, social support negatively predicted alcohol use and positively predicted cannabis use during Lockdown. These findings suggest a difference in motives underlying alcohol and cannabis use in emerging adults. Importantly, these changes were not sustained when restrictions eased, suggesting that emerging adults exhibit resiliency to the impacts of COVID-19 restrictions on substance use.
感知到的社会支持对年轻人使用酒精和大麻的不同影响:来自COVID-19大流行的教训
冠状病毒(COVID-19)封锁为研究社会环境变化如何影响心理健康和福祉提供了一个独特的机会。我们通过评估COVID-19限制期间感知的社会支持如何改变新成年人群的酒精和大麻使用情况来解决这一问题,新成年人群易受物质使用不良后果的影响。加拿大和美国的463名年轻人完成了三个回顾性时间点的在线问卷调查:冠状病毒前、封锁和放松限制。评估了社会人口因素、感知社会支持和物质使用情况。总体而言,在封锁期间,酒精的使用减少了,而大麻的使用增加了。有趣的是,在封锁期间,社会支持对酒精使用有负面预测,对大麻使用有积极预测。这些发现表明,新成年人群使用酒精和大麻的动机存在差异。重要的是,当限制放松时,这些变化并没有持续下去,这表明新生成年人对COVID-19限制对物质使用的影响表现出弹性。
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来源期刊
University of Toronto Medical Journal
University of Toronto Medical Journal MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
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0
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