With the closures of indoor dining, bars, theaters, and concert venues in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, heavy drinking young adults found themselves consuming 13 less drinks per month compared to pre-pandemic months, according to a new study in the journal Nature Mental Health.
Moreover, this decline in consumption was still evident in 2022 after the initial pandemic restrictions had ended.
"These results highlight the social nature of drinking and speak to the importance of the social context in driving drinking behavior," said Aidan Wright, PhD, of the University of Michigan in a press release from Carnegie Mellon.
These results highlight the social nature of drinking and speak to the importance of the social context in driving drinking behavior.
The protective study followed study prospectively examined the drinking patterns of 234 heavy-drinking young adults ages 21 to 29 years. Participants were asked about their drinking habits every six months from February 2018 to March 2022.
Heavy drinkers were those who said they consumed four (women) or five (men) drinks in one sitting at least 4 times per month.
Slight increase in solitary drinking
The authors said the drop in number of drinks consumed each month was largely driven by significant decreases in weekend (versus weekday) drinking quantity and frequency and drinks per drinking day.
Solitary drinking did increase by 4% during the first year of the pandemic. But the study authors suggested this finding was reflective of the limitations on social drinking.
"Drinking to cope is the main reason young people engage in solitary drinking," said Kasey. "But in this study, we actually saw a decrease in drinking to cope motives along with decreases in negative affectivity, so we think this increase in solitary drinking is less of a signal of something problematic happening and more a result of pandemic-related restrictions on social drinking settings."