| Literature DB >> 33192708 |
Matthew D McPhee1, Matthew T Keough2, Samantha Rundle1, Laura M Heath1, Jeffrey D Wardell2,3,4, Christian S Hendershot1,3,4,5.
Abstract
Background: Increases in the incidence of psychological distress and alcohol use during the COVID-19 pandemic have been predicted. Behavioral theories of depression and alcohol self-medication theories suggest that greater social/environmental constraints and increased psychological distress during COVID-19 could result in increases in depression and drinking to cope with negative affect. The current study had two goals: (1) to examine self-reported changes in alcohol use and related outcomes after the introduction of COVID-19 social distancing requirements, and; (2) to test hypothesized mediation models to explain individual differences in self-reported changes in depression and alcohol use during the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; alcohol; depression; mental health; social distancing; stress
Year: 2020 PMID: 33192708 PMCID: PMC7661794 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.574676
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Sample Characteristics.
| AUDIT Total score—past year ( | 10.49 (8.13) |
| Frequency of past-year drinking | |
| Every day | 15.80% |
| 5 to 6 times per week | 16.30% |
| 3 to 4 times per week | 24.60% |
| twice a week | 22.40% |
| once a week | 13.00% |
| 2 to 3 times per month | 7.80% |
| Living arrangement | |
| With family | 66.1% |
| Live alone | 22.9% |
| With roommate | 8.6% |
| Other | 1.9% |
| Number of residents in household ( | 2.37 (1.49) |
| Income change due to COVID | |
| Increased | 4.3% |
| No change | 41.7% |
| Reduced up to 10% | 12.7% |
| Reduced by 10–25% | 19.1% |
| Reduced by 25–50% | 11.4% |
| Reduced by 51–75% | 4.2% |
| Reduced by more than 75% | 2.0% |
| 100% income loss | 4.3% |
| Change in hours working due to COVID | |
| Working the same # hours | 43.9% |
| Working more hours | 13.2% |
| Working fewer hours | 34.2% |
| On leave, terminated or quit | 8.5% |
| COVID-related worry ( | 4.69 (1.67) |
| PDI Total Score - anchored to COVID ( | 1.19 (0.93) |
AUDIT, Alcohol use disorders identification test. PDI, Peritraumatic Distress Inventory (anchored to COVID-19).
Paired Samples t-test Statistics.
| Alcohol QF | 17.35 (14.45) | 17.38 (13.83) | −0.070 | 0.944 |
| NIAAA: Frequency | 5.19 (1.59) | 5.18 (1.79) | 0.231 | 0.818 |
| NIAAA: Quantity | 3.16 (2.09) | 3.15 (1.95) | 0.075 | 0.940 |
| NIAAA: Time | 2.63 (0.94) | 2.69 (1.08) | −2.039 | 0.042 |
| NIAAA: Max drinks | 4.02 (1.94) | 3.95 (2.01) | 1.560 | 0.119 |
| NIAAA: Binge frequency | 2.85 (1.97) | 3.00 (2.03) | −3.220 | |
| RPI: Reward probability | 33.95 (5.68) | 30.23 (6.60) | 18.823 | |
| RPI: Environmental suppressors | 26.53 (6.82) | 25.67 (6.53) | 6.088 | |
| RPI: Total | 60.40 (9.94) | 55.89 (9.61) | 16.771 | |
| DMQ: Social motives | 2.71 (1.12) | 2.08 (1.20) | 19.239 | |
| DMQ: Coping motives | 2.38 (1.09) | 2.49 (1.12) | −5.356 | |
| DMQ: Enhancement motives | 2.82 (1.00) | 2.73 (1.03) | 4.095 | |
| DMQ: Conformity motives | 1.91 (1.10) | 1.79 (1.13) | 6.507 | |
| PHQ: Total | 6.58 (6.99) | 7.49 (7.01) | −7.683 | |
| Solitary drinking frequency | 6.73 (3.29) | 5.14 (3.52) | 16.169 | |
| Virtual drinking frequency | 3.83 (3.42) | 5.36 (3.91) | −12.188 | |
| APT: Intensity | 8.61 (27.74) | 7.34 (10.23) | 1.425 | 0.155 |
| APT: Breakpoint | 9.89 (4.54) | 9.72 (4.65) | 2.245 | 0.025 |
| APT: Omax | 21.43 (22.04) | 23.93 (27.55) | −4.624 | |
| APT: Pmax | 7.25 (3.88) | 7.10 (3.79) | 1.441 | 0.150 |
| APT: Elasticity | 0.026 (0.21) | 0.076 (1.04) | −1.509 | 0.132 |
NIAAA, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (questions from 5-item set); RPI, Reward Probability Index; Items that contribute to the environmental suppressors subscale of the Reward Probability Index are reverse-scored. DMQ, Drinking Motives Questionnaire; APT, Alcohol Purchase Task; Statistical significance threshold set at 0.002 to correct for family wise error.
Mean score for white participants significantly greater than non-white mean score (p < 0.002).
Mean score for non-white participants significantly greater than white mean score (p < 0.002).
Bolded values p < 0.002.
Indirect and Direct Effects for hypothesized mediation models.
| Mediation Model 1 | ||||||
| Direct Effect (Reward Probability Index) | 0.051 | 0.051 | 1.011 | 0.312 | ||
| Indirect Effects | ||||||
| Depression severity (PHQ) | −0.060 | 0.024 | −0.108 | −0.014 | ||
| Coping motives (DMQ-R) | −0.054 | 0.015 | −0.087 | −0.027 | ||
| Sequential effect | −0.024 | 0.008 | −0.041 | −0.010 | ||
| Mediation Model 2 | ||||||
| Direct Effect (COVID-related distress) | 0.901 | 0.503 | 1.789 | 0.074 | ||
| Indirect Effect (Coping motives) | 0.805 | 0.209 | 0.436 | 1.256 | ||
Mediation model 1: indirect effect of environmental reward on alcohol use sequentially through severity of depressive symptoms and coping motives. PHQ, Patient Health Questionnaire; DMQ-R, Drinking Motives Questionnaire—Revised. Mediation model 2: indirect effect of COVID-related distress on alcohol use through coping motives. Confidence intervals presented here are 95% bias-corrected bootstrap estimates.
Figure 1Sequential indirect effect of environmental reward on alcohol QF through severity of depressive symptoms and coping motives. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01. RPI, Reward Probability Index; PHQ, Patient Health Questionnaire; DMQ-R, Drinking Motives Questionnaire—Revised; Alcohol QF, measure of alcohol quantity/frequency (see Analysis Plan). All variables shown in the model correspond to post-social-distancing scores. Environmental reward indirectly significantly predicted alcohol QF through three unique paths: sequentially through depressive symptoms then coping motives; coping motives only, and; depressive symptoms only. Path coefficients are unstandardized b values. Sex and race were included as demographic covariates. Pre-social-distancing covariates included: environmental reward probability, depressive symptoms, motives (coping, enhancement, conformity, social), and alcohol QF.
Figure 2Indirect effect of COVID-related distress on alcohol QF through coping motives. **p < 0.01. PDI, Peritraumatic Distress Inventory; DMQ-R, Drinking Motives Questionnaire—Revised; Alcohol QF, measure of alcohol quantity/frequency (see Analysis Plan). Post-social-distancing coping motives and post-social-distancing alcohol QF are shown in the model. COVID-related distress was not anchored to a specific timeframe. The indirect effect of COVID-related distress on alcohol QF through coping motives was significant. Path coefficients are unstandardized b values. Sex and race were included as demographic covariates. Pre-social-distancing covariates included: motives (coping, enhancement, conformity, social), and alcohol QF.