Availability and Characteristics of Nonbeverage Alcohols Sold in 17 Russian Cities in 2007
Open Access
- 22 December 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Alcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research
- Vol. 33 (1) , 79-85
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1530-0277.2008.00813.x
Abstract
Background: It is known that a range of nonbeverage alcohols including eau‐de‐colognes and medicinal tinctures are consumed by sections of the Russian population. Research conducted in a city in the Urals (2003 to 2005) showed that consumption of such products is associated with very high mortality from a wide range of causes. However, there have been no systematic attempts to investigate the extent to which such products are available in other cities of the Russian Federation. There is particular interest in establishing this following the introduction of new federal regulations in January 2006 aimed at restricting the availability of these products. Methods: In the first half of 2007, we conducted a survey in 17 cities that spanned the full range of city types in the Russian Federation excluding those in the Far East. In each city, fieldworkers visited pharmacies and other types of retail outlets and purchased samples of nonbeverage alcohols. These were defined as being typically 10 to 15 roubles per bottle, with an ethanol concentration of at least 60% by volume. Results: We were able to purchase samples of nonbeverage alcohols in each of the 17 cities we investigated. The majority of the 271 products included were a cheaper and more affordable source of ethanol than standard Russian vodka. Medicinal tinctures, sold almost exclusively in pharmacies, were particularly common with an average concentration of 78% ethanol by volume. Most importantly, the majority of the products were of a sort that our previous research in 2004 to 2005 had established were drunk by working‐age men. Conclusions: While the 2006 federal regulations introduced in part to reduce the availability and consumption of nonbeverage alcohols may have had some effect on certain classes of nonmedicinal products, up until June 2007 at least, medicinal tinctures as well as some other nonbeverage alcohols that are consumed appear to have been readily available.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- A rapid situation assessment of the market for surrogate and illegal alcohols in Tallinn, EstoniaInternational Journal of Public Health, 2007
- Surrogate Alcohol: What Do We Know and Where Do We Go?Alcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 2007
- Alcohol consumption and public health in RussiaThe Lancet, 2007
- Hazardous alcohol drinking and premature mortality in Russia: a population based case-control studyThe Lancet, 2007
- Prevalence and socio‐economic distribution of hazardous patterns of alcohol drinking: study of alcohol consumption in men aged 25–54 years in Izhevsk, RussiaAddiction, 2007
- Russian alcohol policy in the makingAlcohol and Alcoholism, 2007
- Comparing alcohol consumption in central and eastern Europe to other European countriesAlcohol and Alcoholism, 2007
- THE COMPOSITION OF SURROGATE AND ILLEGAL ALCOHOL PRODUCTS IN ESTONIAAlcohol and Alcoholism, 2006
- The Composition of Surrogate Alcohols Consumed in RussiaAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 2005
- Alcohol‐related human losses in Russia in the 1980s and 1990sAddiction, 2002