4.2 Article

Changes in young adult substance use during COVID-19 as a function of ACEs, depression, prior substance use and resilience

Journal

SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 212-221

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1080/08897077.2021.1930629

Keywords

COVID-19; e-cigarettes; substance use; depression; ACEs; resilience

Funding

  1. US National Cancer Institute [R01CA179422-01, R01CA239178-01A1]
  2. US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/Fogarty International Center [D43ES030927-01, 1R01TW010664-01]

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This study examined changes in cigarette, e-cigarette, marijuana, and alcohol use among young adults during COVID-19, finding that interventions targeting both risk and protective factors, particularly resilience, could reduce substance use during periods of societal stress.
Background: Given the potential for increased substance use during COVID-19, we examined (1) young adults' changes in cigarette, e-cigarette, marijuana, and alcohol use from pre- to during COVID-19; and (2) related risk/protective factors. These findings could inform intervention efforts aimed at curbing increases in substance use during periods of societal stress. Methods: We analyzed Wave 3 (W3; September-December 2019) and Wave 4 (W4; March-May 2020) from the Vape shop Advertising, Place characteristics and Effects Surveillance (VAPES), a 2-year, five-wave longitudinal study of young adults across six metropolitan areas. We examined risk/protective factors (i.e. adverse childhood experiences [ACEs], depressive symptoms, resilience) in relation to changes in past 30-day substance use frequency. Results: In this sample (N = 1084, M-age=24.76, SD = 4.70; 51.8% female; 73.6% White; 12.5% Hispanic), W3/W4 past 30-day use prevalence was: 29.1% cigarettes (19.4% increased/26.4% decreased), 36.5% e-cigarettes (23.2% increased/28.6% decreased), 49.4% marijuana (27.2% increased/21.2% decreased), and 84.8% alcohol (32.9% increased/20.7% decreased). Multivariate regressions indicated that, greater increases were predicted by: for e-cigarettes, greater ACEs; and for alcohol, greater depression. Among those with low resilience, predictors included: for e-cigarettes, greater depression; and for marijuana, greater ACEs. Conclusions: Interventions to reduce substance use during societal stressors should target both risk and protective factors, particularly resilience.

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