The Impact of COVID-19 Confinement on Substance Use and Mental Health in Portuguese Higher Education Students

Author:

Oliveira Ana Paula12,Luis Henrique134ORCID,Luís Luís Soares45ORCID,Nobre Joana Rita12ORCID,Pinho Lara Guedes67,Albacar-Riobóo Núria2ORCID,Sequeira Carlos89ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Health School, Polytechnic Institute of Portalegre, 7300-555 Portalegre, Portugal

2. Faculty of Nursing, University of Rovira e Virgili, 43003 Tarragona, Spain

3. Unidade de Investigação em Ciências Orais e Biomédicas (UICOB), RHODes—Dental Hygienists for Sciences, Faculdade de Medicina Dentária, Universidade de Lisboa, Rua Teresa Ambrósio, 1600-277 Lisbon, Portugal

4. Center for Innovative Care and Health Technology (ciTechcare), Polytechnic of Leiria, 2410-541 Leiria, Portugal

5. School of Health Sciences, Polytechnic of Leiria, 2410-541 Leiria, Portugal

6. Nursing School, University of Évora, 7000-811 Évora, Portugal

7. Comprehensive Health Research Centre, University of Évora, 7000-811 Évora, Portugal

8. Nursing School of Porto, 4200-072 Porto, Portugal

9. Group Inovation and Development in Nursing (NursID), Centro de Investigação em Tecnologias e Serviços de Saúde (CINTESIS), 4200-450 Porto, Portugal

Abstract

The mental health of higher education students is a constant concern, and the pandemic situation caused by COVID-19 has intensified this concern. The social measures imposed to control and minimize the disease have led, among other things, to the reconfiguration of higher education students’ academic life habits, which has naturally altered their emotional balance, mental health, and substance abuse. This cross-sectional, descriptive, and correlational study assesses the influence of higher education students’ personal characteristics on their (self-reported) use of addictive substances (alcohol, tobacco, drugs, and pharmaceutical drugs) before and during their first compulsory confinement in Portugal, as well as its relationship with mental health. An online questionnaire was applied between 15 April and 20 May 2020, to students from various study cycles of higher education institutions in one region of Portugal (northern area of Alentejo), which included the Mental Health Inventory in its reduced version (MHI-5) and questions (constructed by the authors) on personal characterization and on the use of addictive substances before and during confinement. The convenience sample included 329 mostly female health care students between the ages of 18 and 24. In our results, we found a statistically significant decrease in tobacco, alcohol, and drug use; however, there was an increase in tobacco use among older students and an increase in anxiolytic use among students with higher academic achievement and among students who exhibited more active social behavior in the period prior to confinement. Students who took anxiolytics during confinement had higher MHI-5 scores and students who used the most addictive substances during confinement had lower MHI-5 scores than the other students.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

Reference44 articles.

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