Mayo Says Young Adult Vaping Down, Alcohol Use Rising
- News This Week Research
- November 21, 2020
- 2 minutes read
There have been significant shifts in substance abuse among young adults during the pandemic, according to a new Mayo Clinic study. Mayo officials surveyed over 1,000 adults ages 18-25, and roughly 34% of them reported changes in substance abuse patterns.
Of those, vaping and smoking rates decreased for nearly half of those who responded, according to a news report by wqow.com.
“However, the most staggering finding was that nearly 70 percent of respondents increased alcohol consumption. Roughly half of them self-reported having depression or an anxiety disorder, which doctors believe contributed to the spike in drinking,” according to the story.
“We thought that with COVID-19, loneliness is a real thing,” said Dr. Pravesh Sharma, a substance use researcher at Mayo Clinic Health System in Eau Claire. “School and colleges are closed, gatherings are limited, and that creates a negative mood state in a lot of people, and young adults often indulge in drinking behavior to cope with those negative mood states.”
Sharma said as news spread about lung damage caused by vaping in early 2019, as well as COVID-19 affecting lung health, more young adults turned away from vaping and smoking.