Population drinking and liver cirrhosis mortality: is there a link in eastern Europe?
- 6 July 2007
- Vol. 102 (8) , 1212-1223
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1360-0443.2007.01872.x
Abstract
To analyse the relationship between population drinking and liver cirrhosis mortality in eastern European countries and compare it with similar findings from western Europe. Yearly data, from the approximate period 1960-2002, on liver cirrhosis mortality in total and by gender were analysed in relation to per capita alcohol consumption in nine eastern European countries divided into 'spirits countries' and 'non-spirits countries'. The Box-Jenkins technique for time-series analysis was used to estimate the impact on liver cirrhosis resulting from a 1-litre increase in per capita consumption in terms of relative (%) and absolute effects (number of cirrhosis deaths). Cirrhosis mortality rates were related significantly to population drinking in eight of nine eastern European countries and both relative and absolute alcohol effects laid within the range of previous western European estimates. A 1-litre increase in per capita consumption was on average estimated to cause three to four additional cirrhosis deaths per 100,000 for men and one additional death for women. The absolute effects for men were relatively high in a European perspective: stronger than in mid- and northern Europe and only marginally weaker in comparison with southern Europe. A reduction in per capita alcohol consumption would prevent many cirrhosis deaths in eastern Europe, particularly for men. It is suggested that further studies of the extent other forms of alcohol-related mortality respond to changes in population drinking in eastern Europe would be valuable.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Improved prognosis for patients hospitalized with esophageal varices in Sweden 1969–2002Hepatology, 2006
- Mortality and population drinking: a review of the literatureDrug and Alcohol Review, 2005
- Could the high level of cirrhosis in central and eastern Europe be due partly to the quality of alcohol consumed? An exploratory investigationAddiction, 2005
- Alcohol and pancreatitis mortality at the population level: experiences from 14 western countriesAddiction, 2004
- Aggregate time‐series regression in the field of alcoholAddiction, 2001
- Alcohol and homicide: a cross‐cultural comparison of the relationship in 14 European countriesAddiction, 2001
- Alcohol and suicide in 14 European countriesAddiction, 2001
- Alcohol consumption and overall accident mortality in 14 European countriesAddiction, 2001
- Per capita alcohol consumption and liver cirrhosis mortality in 14 European countriesAddiction, 2001
- Estimates of total alcohol consumption in Russia, 1980–1994Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 2000