Abstract

Little is known about possible changes in alcohol consumption distribution during the COVID-19 pandemic. We estimated how individual changes in alcohol consumption during the pandemic translated into changes in: (i) mean consumption; (ii) dispersion of consumption distribution; and (iii) prevalence of heavy drinkers. We employed data from two independent web-surveys of Norwegian adults collected between April and July 2020 and limited to those reporting past year alcohol consumption (N1 = 15,267, N2 = 1195). Self-reports of changes in drinking behavior were quantified, assuming change being relative to baseline consumption level. During the pandemic, we found a small increase (Survey 1) or no change (Survey 2) in estimated mean alcohol consumption (which parallels to total consumption). However, in both surveys, the dispersion of the distribution increased significantly (p < 0.001). For most respondents, an average modest decline in consumption was found. However, the small fraction with the highest baseline consumption increased their consumption substantially, and in effect, the proportion of heavy drinkers increased markedly (p < 0.001). In conclusion, quantifications of reported changes in alcohol consumption during the pandemic suggest that the upper 5 to 10% of the drinkers increased their consumption and hence the prevalence of heavy drinkers increased, despite little or no change in total alcohol consumption.

Highlights

  • Alcohol consumption is among the leading risk factors for premature death and loss of healthy life years globally [1]

  • Changes in total alcohol consumption are accompanied by changes in rates of alcohol-related harms [6], and an increase in consumption implies an increase in the population prevalence of heavy drinking and incidence of alcohol-related harms, and vice versa

  • One implication of this regularity is a strong association between the mean alcohol consumption per drinker in a population and the prevalence of heavy or

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Summary

Introduction

Alcohol consumption is among the leading risk factors for premature death and loss of healthy life years globally [1]. Changes in total alcohol consumption are accompanied by changes in rates of alcohol-related harms [6], and an increase in consumption implies an increase in the population prevalence of heavy drinking and incidence of alcohol-related harms, and vice versa This important public health effect of the overall alcohol consumption level in a society, reflects a consistent pattern of regularity in the distribution of alcohol consumption across various populations and societies; it is highly skewed, and there is a strong association between the arithmetic mean and the dispersion of alcohol consumption [6,7,8]. One implication of this regularity is a strong association between the mean alcohol consumption per drinker in a population (which corresponds to total consumption) and the prevalence of heavy or

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