Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pitt study finds dramatic rise in pandemic

Alcohol complicati­ons in middle-aged women

- By Anya Sostek Anya Sostek: asostek@postgazett­e.com

Serious alcohol-related complicati­ons among middle-aged women increased dramatical­ly during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new research from the University of Pittsburgh.

The study looked at medical insurance billings from a population of 14 million patients and found that in 16 of the 18 months of the COVID19 pandemic, middle-aged women had higher- than -expected rates of hospital admissions for alcohol-related liver disease.

“We anticipate­d finding some increase in hospitaliz­ations for alcohol- related complicati­ons among women,” said Bryant Shuey, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and lead author of the study, published Friday in JAMA Health Forum. “We didn’t realize it would be this stark.”

For 10 of the 18 months, middle- aged women had higher-than-expected hospital admissions for general alcohol-related complicati­ons. In those 10 months, those complicati­ons increased 33.3% to 56% among middleaged women.

In the population as a whole, the study found higher-than-expected rates of alcohol complicati­ons in four of the 18 pandemic months. Those complicati­ons resulted from alcohol-related disorders such as cirrhosis, hepatitis, withdrawal and heart disease.

“We know that drinking has increased among women over the last decade and that women, particular­ly compared to men, increased alcohol use during the pandemic,” said Dr. Shuey, who is also a physician who treats patients with alcohol use disorders. “Our study adds to a grouping of studies now which really raise the alarm bells to say that the gap between men and women is narrowing and we need to intervene.”

It is possible that the study actually undercount­ed the amount of increases in hospital admissions, said Dr. Shuey, because it relied on medical coding of each admission as alcohol-related. A hospital visit billed simply as liver disease would not have been counted in the study, even if it was due to alcoholrel­ated causes.

While the study did not investigat­e reasons for increased alcohol use among middle-aged women during the pandemic, possible causes could be pandemic-related social isolation, stress caused by bearing a disproport­ionate amount of the parenting burden and marketing campaigns aimed at women.

Dr. Shuey began the research during a fellowship at Harvard Medical School and continued it after coming to Pitt in August. Researcher­s from Harvard, Emory, Washington University and Duke also contribute­d to the study.

Further research will likely explore how the pandemic affected treatment options for those using alcohol excessivel­y, and whether there is still a gap in patients’ access to those services.

The study also recommende­d that policymake­rs take action to combat growing alcohol-related deaths.

“More people died last year from alcohol than from all drug overdoses combined,” Dr. Shuey said. “There needs to be further attention to enacting policies that reduce the negative effects — we need to protect people from the harmful effects of alcohol.”

 ?? UPMC ?? Bryant Shuey, assistant professor of medicine and internal medicine physician at Pitt and the study’s lead author
UPMC Bryant Shuey, assistant professor of medicine and internal medicine physician at Pitt and the study’s lead author

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