Impact of the WHO "best buys" for alcohol policy on consumption and health in the Baltic countries and Poland 2000-2020

  • Jürgen Rehm
  • Robertas Badaras
  • Carina Ferreira-Borges
  • Lukas Galkus
  • Nijole Gostautaite Midttun
  • Inese Gobiņa
  • Kinga Janik-Koncewicz
  • Domantas Jasilionis
  • Huan Jiang
  • Kawon Victoria Kim
  • Shannon Lange
  • Vaida Liutkutė-Gumarov
  • Jakob Manthey
  • Laura Miščikienė
  • Maria Neufeld
  • Janina Petkevičienė
  • Ričardas Radišauskas
  • Rainer Reile
  • Robin Room
  • Relika Stoppel
  • Ilona Tamutienė
  • Alexander Tran
  • Justina Trišauskė
  • Mateusz Zatoński
  • Witold A Zatoński
  • Ingrida Zurlytė
  • Mindaugas Štelemėkas

Abstract

Alcohol use is a major risk factor for burden of disease. This narrative review aims to document the effects of major alcohol control policies, in particular taxation increases and availability restrictions in the three Baltic countries (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania) between 2000 and 2020. These measures have been successful in curbing alcohol sales, in general without increasing consumption of alcoholic beverages from unrecorded sources; although for more recent changes this may have been partly due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Moreover, findings from time-series analyses suggest improved health, measured as reductions in all-cause and alcohol-attributable mortality, as well as narrowing absolute mortality inequalities between lower and higher educated groups. For most outcomes, there were sex differences observed, with alcohol control policies more strongly affecting males. In contrast to this successful path, alcohol control policies were mostly dismantled in the neighbouring country of Poland, resulting in a rising death toll due to liver cirrhosis and other alcohol-attributable deaths. The natural experiment in this region of high-income European countries with high consumption levels highlights the importance of effective alcohol control policies for improving population health.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2666-7762
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 10.2023

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2023 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

PubMed 37953993