Are Cisgender Women and Transgender and Nonbinary People Drinking More During the COVID-19 Pandemic? It Depends.

Q1 Psychology
Alcohol research : current reviews Pub Date : 2023-12-28 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.35946/arcr.v43.1.05
Cindy B Veldhuis, Noah T Kreski, John Usseglio, Katherine M Keyes
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: This narrative review of research conducted during the first 2 years of the COVID-19 pandemic examines whether alcohol use among cisgender women and transgender and nonbinary people increased during the pandemic. The overarching goal of the review is to inform intervention and prevention efforts to halt the narrowing of gender-related differences in alcohol use.

Search methods: Eight databases (PubMed, APA PsycInfo, CINAHL, Embase, Scopus, Gender Studies Database, GenderWatch, and Web of Science) were searched for peer-reviewed literature, published between March 2020 and July 2022, that reported gender differences or findings specific to women, transgender or nonbinary people, and alcohol use during the pandemic. The search focused on studies conducted in the United States and excluded qualitative research.

Search results: A total 4,132 records were identified, including 400 duplicates. Of the remaining 3,732 unique records for consideration in the review, 51 were ultimately included. Overall, most studies found increases in alcohol use as well as gender differences in alcohol use, with cisgender women experiencing the most serious consequences. The findings for transgender and nonbinary people were equivocal due to the dearth of research and because many studies aggregated across gender.

Discussion and conclusions: Alcohol use by cisgender women seems to have increased during the pandemic; however, sizable limitations need to be considered, particularly the low number of studies on alcohol use during the pandemic that analyzed gender differences. This is of concern as gender differences in alcohol use had been narrowing before the pandemic; and this review suggests the gap has narrowed even further. Cisgender women and transgender and nonbinary people have experienced sizable stressors during the pandemic; thus, understanding the health and health behavior impacts of these stressors is critical to preventing the worsening of problematic alcohol use.

在 COVID-19 大流行期间,顺性别女性、跨性别者和非二元性者是否喝得更多?这取决于情况。
目的:本综述对 COVID-19 大流行头两年期间开展的研究进行了叙述性综述,探讨在大流行期间,顺性别女性、跨性别者和非二元性别者的饮酒量是否有所增加。综述的总体目标是为干预和预防工作提供信息,以阻止酒精使用中与性别相关的差异缩小:在八个数据库(PubMed、APA PsycInfo、CINAHL、Embase、Scopus、性别研究数据库、GenderWatch 和 Web of Science)中检索了 2020 年 3 月至 2022 年 7 月间发表的同行评审文献,这些文献报告了大流行期间女性、变性人或非二元人群以及酒精使用方面的性别差异或特定发现。搜索的重点是在美国进行的研究,不包括定性研究:共发现 4,132 条记录,包括 400 条重复记录。在其余 3,732 条供审查的唯一记录中,最终纳入了 51 条。总体而言,大多数研究发现酒精使用量增加以及酒精使用的性别差异,其中顺性别女性经历的后果最为严重。对于变性人和非二元人的研究结果则模棱两可,这是因为相关研究较少,而且许多研究都是跨性别汇总研究:在大流行期间,顺性别女性的饮酒量似乎有所增加;然而,我们需要考虑到相当大的局限性,尤其是在大流行期间,分析性别差异的饮酒研究数量较少。这一点令人担忧,因为在大流行之前,酒精使用的性别差异一直在缩小;而本综述表明,这一差距已进一步缩小。顺性别女性、变性人和非二元性人群在大流行期间经历了巨大的压力;因此,了解这些压力对健康和健康行为的影响对于防止问题性饮酒的恶化至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Alcohol research : current reviews
Alcohol research : current reviews Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
18.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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