Over the past decade, alcohol use levels have declined in almost all Former Soviet Union (FSU) countries, paralleled by the introduction of various alcohol policy solutions to the heavy alcohol burden in respective countries. The so-called three ‘best buys’ put forward by the World Health Organization to reduce the alcohol-attributable burden (taxation and other measures to increase price, restrictions on alcohol availability and marketing) are relatively well implemented across the countries.
The strong declines in alcohol use observed in the 15 FSU countries in this study resulted in a reduction of alcohol consumption in the World Health Organization European region overall.

Author

Maria Neufeld, Anastacia Bobrova, Kairat Davletov, Mindaugas Štelemėkas, Relika Stoppel, Carina Ferreira-Borges, João Breda, Jürgen Rehm

Citation

Neufeld M, Bobrova A, Davletov K, Å telemÄ—kas M, Stoppel R, Ferreira-Borges C, Breda J, Rehm J. Alcohol control policies in Former Soviet Union countries: A narrative review of three decades of policy changes and their apparent effects. Drug Alcohol Rev. 2020 Nov 5. doi: 10.1111/dar.13204. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 33155370.


Source
Drug and Alcohol Review
Release date
05/11/2020

Alcohol Control Policies in Former Soviet Union Countries: A Narrative Review of Three Decades of Policy Changes and Their Apparent Effects

Abstract

Issues

The last Soviet anti-alcohol campaign of 1985 resulted in considerably reduced alcohol consumption and saved thousands of lives. But once the campaign’s policies were abandoned and the Soviet alcohol monopoly broken up, a steep rise in mortality was observed in many of the newly formed successor countries, although some kept their monopolies. Almost 30 years after the campaign’s end, the region faces diverse challenges in relation to alcohol.

Approach

The present narrative review sheds light on recent alcohol use trends and alcohol policy developments in the 15 Former Soviet Union (FSU) countries, highlighting the most important setbacks, achievements and best practices. Vignettes of alcohol control policies in Belarus, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Lithuania and Uzbekistan are presented to illustrate the recent developments.

Key findings

Over the past decade, alcohol use levels have declined in almost all FSU countries, paralleled by the introduction of various alcohol-control measures. The so-called three ‘best buys’ put forward by the World Health Organization to reduce alcohol-attributable burden (taxation and other measures to increase price, restrictions on alcohol availability and marketing) are relatively well implemented across the countries.

Implications

In recent years, evidence-based alcohol policies have been actively implemented as a response to the enormous alcohol-attributable burden in many of the countries, although there is big variance across and within different jurisdictions.

Conclusion

Strong declines in alcohol consumption were observed in the 15 FSU countries, which have introduced various alcohol control measures in recent years, resulting in a reduction of alcohol consumption in the World Health Organization European region overall.


Source Website: PubMed