Researchers conducted a survey to understand how substance use patterns among U.S. high school students may have changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. They compared reported use from before the pandemic to the period during it. The goal was to see if the major life disruptions caused by the pandemic were linked to shifts in how often students used substances like alcohol, tobacco, or other drugs.
The survey focused specifically on high school students across the United States. The report did not share the number of students surveyed or the specific results about whether substance use went up, down, or stayed the same. It also did not report on any safety concerns or negative events related to substance use during the study period.
It is important to be careful with these results. This was an observational survey, which means it can only show a possible link or pattern, not prove that the pandemic caused any changes. Without knowing the specific findings or the size of the survey, it is hard to know how reliable the information is. Readers should see this as a preliminary look at a complex topic, not a definitive answer.