Increased alcohol use, increased solitary alcohol use, and greater coping motives for alcohol use were all independently associated with past 30‐day alcohol problems, and indirect paths to alcohol problems from having children at home, depression, social connectedness, income loss, and living alone were all supported.

Author

Jeffrey D. Wardell, Tyler Kempe, Karli K. Rapinda, Alanna Single, Elena Bilevicius, Jona R. Frohlich, Christian S. Hendershot and Matthew T. Keough

Citation

Wardell, J.D., Kempe, T., Rapinda, K.K., Single, A., Bilevicius, E., Frohlich, J.R., Hendershot, C.S. and Keough, M.T. (2020), Drinking to Cope During COVID‐19 Pandemic: The Role of External and Internal Factors in Coping Motive Pathways to Alcohol Use, Solitary Drinking, and Alcohol Problems. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. doi:10.1111/acer.14425


Source
Alcoholism Clinical and Experimental Research
Release date
01/09/2020

Drinking to Cope During COVID‐19 Pandemic: The Role of External and Internal Factors in Coping Motive Pathways to Alcohol Use, Solitary Drinking, and Alcohol Problems

Research article

Abstract

Background

The COVID‐19 pandemic has resulted in massive disruptions to society, to the economy, and to daily life. Some people may turn to alcohol to cope with stress during the pandemic, which may put them at risk for heavy alcohol use and alcohol‐related harms. Research is needed to identify factors that are relevant for coping‐motivated alcohol use during these extraordinary circumstances to inform interventions. This study provides an empirical examination of coping motive pathways to alcohol problems during the early stages of the COVID‐19 pandemic.

Methods

Participants (N = 320; 54.7% male; mean age of 32 years) were Canadian adult alcohol users who completed an online survey assessing work‐ and home‐related factors, psychological factors, and alcohol‐related outcomes over the past 30 days, covering a time period beginning within 1 month of the initiation of the COVID‐19 emergency response.

Results

The results of a theory‐informed path model showed that having at least 1 child under the age of 18, greater depression, and lower social connectedness each predicted unique variance in past 30‐day coping motives, which in turn predicted increased past 30‐day alcohol use (controlling for pre‐COVID‐19 alcohol use reported retrospectively).

Income loss was associated with increased alcohol use, and living alone was associated with increased solitary alcohol use (controlling for pre‐COVID‐19 levels), but these associations were not mediated by coping motives. Increased alcohol use, increased solitary alcohol use, and greater coping motives for alcohol use were all independently associated with past 30‐day alcohol problems, and indirect paths to alcohol problems from having children at home, depression, social connectedness, income loss, and living alone were all supported.

Conclusions

Findings provide insight into coping‐motivated alcohol use early in the COVID‐19 pandemic and highlight the need for longitudinal research to establish longer term outcomes of alcohol use to cope during the pandemic.


Source Website: Wiley Online Library