$2M UH Cancer Center study examines COVID effects on mental health, tobacco use among young adults

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
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Posted: Jan 24, 2022

Pallav Pokhrel
Pallav Pokhrel

The COVID-19 pandemic has contributed to significant increases in depression and anxiety among Americans, especially young adults, according to data collected through the U.S. Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Surveys. However, very little is known about how the pandemic has affected mental health and tobacco and other substance use behavior of Hawai‘i’s young adults, especially across different racial/ethnic groups.

A research team led by a University of Hawai‘i Cancer Center researcher has received a $2.01 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) to conduct this public impact research examining how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected mental health and tobacco and other substance use among the state’s young adults.

Pallav Pokhrel and his team had collected several waves of data on mental health and tobacco, and other substance use from a cohort of more than 2,000 Hawai‘i young adults prior to the pandemic, through a previous grant supported by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The new NIDA funding will help Pokhrel and his team follow this same cohort during the pandemic, with the purpose of understanding how various aspects of COVID-19, such as loneliness and financial stress, may have affected their mental health and substance use behavior.  

“This study will help us understand the social and psychological mechanisms through which the pandemic may differentially affect the mental health and tobacco use of young adults of different racial/ethnic backgrounds,” said Pokhrel. 

He added that such information could assist with needs-based development of health promotion—including tobacco use prevention—strategies in Hawai‘i.

“This is an important new project and represents the kind of innovative behavioral cancer prevention research we conduct at the UH Cancer Center,” said Interim Director Joe W. Ramos. “Members of this team are leaders in the field, and I look forward to the outcomes of this work so that we can begin to address any issues they may find here in Hawai‘i.”

Link to Grant information

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The University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center through its various activities, including scientific research and clinical trials, adds more than $57 million to the Oʻahu economy.  It is one of only 71 research institutions designated by the National Cancer Institute.  An organized research unit within the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, the UH Cancer Center is dedicated to eliminating cancer through research, education, patient care and community outreach with an emphasis on the unique ethnic, cultural, and environmental characteristics of Hawaiʻi and the Pacific. Learn more at https://www.uhcancercenter.org.  Like us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/UHCancerCenter.  Follow us on Twitter @UHCancerCenter