{"title":"公益文章","authors":"","doi":"10.1111/acer.15251","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<h2> Stressors Linked to Increased Drinking College Students during COVID Pandemic, Differ by Race</h2>\n<p>College students reporting increased mental distress during the pandemic also reported greater quantity and frequency of alcohol use, and distress was linked to certain pandemic-related factors which differed by race. A study published in <i>Alcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research</i> identified social distancing as a stressor linked with mental distress for both Black and White college students, whereas financial issues were associated with mental distress in White students, and contracting COVID-19 was linked to mental distress in Black students.</p>\n<p>The study examined whether mental distress may be a link between pandemic-specific stressors and student drinking behaviors and whether that link differs by race. Researchers surveyed four hundred college students from October to December 2020 about whether they experienced any of nine pandemic-related stressors. They were also asked about changes in drinking quantity and frequency and assessed for symptoms of stress, anxiety, depression, and alcohol use over the past month.</p>\n<p>Half of the participants experienced financial stressors. Twenty to 30 percent reported each of five other factors due to the pandemic: job loss, taking care of someone, change to telework, being an essential worker, or a changed living situation. Overall, taking care of someone, financial stressors, and social distancing were associated with increased mental distress. In turn, mental distress was linked to increased quantity and frequency of drinking. Regardless of mental distress levels, students experiencing financial stressors were more likely to drink more and more often than they did pre-pandemic. Participants who started teleworking were more likely to report an increased quantity of drinking; participants taking care of someone drank more often.</p>\n<p>When examining differences across race, Black participants reported greater mental distress than White participants. Financial stressors were linked to greater mental distress among White students but not for Black students. For Black participants, being an essential worker was associated with lower levels of mental distress, while contracting COVID-19 was associated with greater mental distress; neither factor was significantly associated with mental distress for White participants. Social distancing was linked to greater mental distress for all students. Researchers found no significant differences between Black and White students in perceived changes in the quantity and frequency of drinking.</p>\n<p>Compared to their drinking patterns before the pandemic, about half of the participants reported no changes in the quantity or frequency of their drinking; twenty-seven percent reported drinking greater quantity, and 34 percent reported drinking more often. Black students reported drinking alcohol less frequently and in significantly lower quantities than White students.</p>\n<p>Researchers recommend university efforts to connect students with campus mental health services, which tend to be used by 10 percent of students, with Asian, Black, and Latinx students utilizing care at lower rates than White students.</p>\n<p>This cross-sectional mediation analysis does not imply causality and did not examine other factors that may have contributed to mental distress. Forty-three percent of participants were White, and 28 percent were Black; three-quarters were cisgender women.</p>\n<p>The impact of COVID-19 pandemic experiences on college drinking via mental distress: Cross-sectional moderated mediation by race. Abby L. Braitman, R. Ayala Guzman, M. Strowger, J. Shipley, D. Glenn, E. Junkin, A. Whiteside, C. Lau-Barraco. (pp. 2313–2330)</p>","PeriodicalId":501173,"journal":{"name":"Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research","volume":"26 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Articles of Public Interest\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/acer.15251\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<h2> Stressors Linked to Increased Drinking College Students during COVID Pandemic, Differ by Race</h2>\\n<p>College students reporting increased mental distress during the pandemic also reported greater quantity and frequency of alcohol use, and distress was linked to certain pandemic-related factors which differed by race. A study published in <i>Alcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research</i> identified social distancing as a stressor linked with mental distress for both Black and White college students, whereas financial issues were associated with mental distress in White students, and contracting COVID-19 was linked to mental distress in Black students.</p>\\n<p>The study examined whether mental distress may be a link between pandemic-specific stressors and student drinking behaviors and whether that link differs by race. Researchers surveyed four hundred college students from October to December 2020 about whether they experienced any of nine pandemic-related stressors. They were also asked about changes in drinking quantity and frequency and assessed for symptoms of stress, anxiety, depression, and alcohol use over the past month.</p>\\n<p>Half of the participants experienced financial stressors. Twenty to 30 percent reported each of five other factors due to the pandemic: job loss, taking care of someone, change to telework, being an essential worker, or a changed living situation. Overall, taking care of someone, financial stressors, and social distancing were associated with increased mental distress. In turn, mental distress was linked to increased quantity and frequency of drinking. Regardless of mental distress levels, students experiencing financial stressors were more likely to drink more and more often than they did pre-pandemic. Participants who started teleworking were more likely to report an increased quantity of drinking; participants taking care of someone drank more often.</p>\\n<p>When examining differences across race, Black participants reported greater mental distress than White participants. Financial stressors were linked to greater mental distress among White students but not for Black students. For Black participants, being an essential worker was associated with lower levels of mental distress, while contracting COVID-19 was associated with greater mental distress; neither factor was significantly associated with mental distress for White participants. Social distancing was linked to greater mental distress for all students. Researchers found no significant differences between Black and White students in perceived changes in the quantity and frequency of drinking.</p>\\n<p>Compared to their drinking patterns before the pandemic, about half of the participants reported no changes in the quantity or frequency of their drinking; twenty-seven percent reported drinking greater quantity, and 34 percent reported drinking more often. Black students reported drinking alcohol less frequently and in significantly lower quantities than White students.</p>\\n<p>Researchers recommend university efforts to connect students with campus mental health services, which tend to be used by 10 percent of students, with Asian, Black, and Latinx students utilizing care at lower rates than White students.</p>\\n<p>This cross-sectional mediation analysis does not imply causality and did not examine other factors that may have contributed to mental distress. Forty-three percent of participants were White, and 28 percent were Black; three-quarters were cisgender women.</p>\\n<p>The impact of COVID-19 pandemic experiences on college drinking via mental distress: Cross-sectional moderated mediation by race. Abby L. Braitman, R. Ayala Guzman, M. Strowger, J. Shipley, D. Glenn, E. Junkin, A. Whiteside, C. Lau-Barraco. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在 COVID 大流行期间,与大学生饮酒增加有关的压力因素因种族而异。报告在大流行期间精神压力增加的大学生还报告了饮酒数量和频率的增加,而压力与某些与大流行有关的因素有关,这些因素因种族而异。发表在《酒精:临床与实验研究》上的一项研究确定了社交疏远对大学生的影响:该研究探讨了精神痛苦是否可能是大流行病特定压力因素与学生饮酒行为之间的联系,以及这种联系是否因种族而异。研究人员在 2020 年 10 月至 12 月期间对四百名大学生进行了调查,询问他们是否经历过九种与流行病相关的压力。他们还被问及饮酒数量和频率的变化,并对过去一个月的压力、焦虑、抑郁和饮酒症状进行了评估。有 20%至 30%的人报告了因大流行病而产生的其他五个因素:失业、照顾他人、改成远程工作、成为重要工作者或生活状况改变。总体而言,照顾他人、经济压力和社会疏远与精神压力的增加有关。反过来,精神压力又与饮酒数量和频率的增加有关。无论精神压力水平如何,与大流行前相比,面临经济压力的学生更有可能更多和更频繁地饮酒。开始远程工作的参与者更有可能报告饮酒量增加;照顾他人的参与者饮酒更频繁。在白人学生中,经济压力与更大的精神压力有关,但在黑人学生中则不然。对于黑人参与者来说,作为一名基本工作者与较低的精神压力水平有关,而与 COVID-19 签约则与较大的精神压力有关;对于白人参与者来说,这两个因素都与精神压力没有明显的关系。对于所有学生来说,社会疏远都与较大的心理压力有关。研究人员发现,黑人和白人学生在感知到的饮酒数量和频率的变化方面没有明显差异。与大流行前的饮酒模式相比,约有一半的参与者称他们的饮酒数量或频率没有变化;27%的人称饮酒数量增加,34%的人称饮酒频率增加。研究人员建议大学努力将学生与校园心理健康服务机构联系起来,通常有10%的学生会使用校园心理健康服务机构的服务,而亚裔、黑人和拉丁裔学生的使用率低于白人学生。43%的参与者为白人,28%为黑人;四分之三为顺性女性:横截面种族调节作用。Abby L. Braitman, R. Ayala Guzman, M. Strowger, J. Shipley, D. Glenn, E. Junkin, A. Whiteside, C. Lau-Barraco. (pp. 2313-2330)
Stressors Linked to Increased Drinking College Students during COVID Pandemic, Differ by Race
College students reporting increased mental distress during the pandemic also reported greater quantity and frequency of alcohol use, and distress was linked to certain pandemic-related factors which differed by race. A study published in Alcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research identified social distancing as a stressor linked with mental distress for both Black and White college students, whereas financial issues were associated with mental distress in White students, and contracting COVID-19 was linked to mental distress in Black students.
The study examined whether mental distress may be a link between pandemic-specific stressors and student drinking behaviors and whether that link differs by race. Researchers surveyed four hundred college students from October to December 2020 about whether they experienced any of nine pandemic-related stressors. They were also asked about changes in drinking quantity and frequency and assessed for symptoms of stress, anxiety, depression, and alcohol use over the past month.
Half of the participants experienced financial stressors. Twenty to 30 percent reported each of five other factors due to the pandemic: job loss, taking care of someone, change to telework, being an essential worker, or a changed living situation. Overall, taking care of someone, financial stressors, and social distancing were associated with increased mental distress. In turn, mental distress was linked to increased quantity and frequency of drinking. Regardless of mental distress levels, students experiencing financial stressors were more likely to drink more and more often than they did pre-pandemic. Participants who started teleworking were more likely to report an increased quantity of drinking; participants taking care of someone drank more often.
When examining differences across race, Black participants reported greater mental distress than White participants. Financial stressors were linked to greater mental distress among White students but not for Black students. For Black participants, being an essential worker was associated with lower levels of mental distress, while contracting COVID-19 was associated with greater mental distress; neither factor was significantly associated with mental distress for White participants. Social distancing was linked to greater mental distress for all students. Researchers found no significant differences between Black and White students in perceived changes in the quantity and frequency of drinking.
Compared to their drinking patterns before the pandemic, about half of the participants reported no changes in the quantity or frequency of their drinking; twenty-seven percent reported drinking greater quantity, and 34 percent reported drinking more often. Black students reported drinking alcohol less frequently and in significantly lower quantities than White students.
Researchers recommend university efforts to connect students with campus mental health services, which tend to be used by 10 percent of students, with Asian, Black, and Latinx students utilizing care at lower rates than White students.
This cross-sectional mediation analysis does not imply causality and did not examine other factors that may have contributed to mental distress. Forty-three percent of participants were White, and 28 percent were Black; three-quarters were cisgender women.
The impact of COVID-19 pandemic experiences on college drinking via mental distress: Cross-sectional moderated mediation by race. Abby L. Braitman, R. Ayala Guzman, M. Strowger, J. Shipley, D. Glenn, E. Junkin, A. Whiteside, C. Lau-Barraco. (pp. 2313–2330)