Abstract
IN the summer of 1960, the alcoholism programs of Czechoslovakia, Poland and the Soviet Union were examined.1 Poland was reported as suffering extensive alcoholism and inadequate treatment facilities, and attitudes in the Soviet Union, as in the United States, as being moralistic and punitive. Czechoslovakia, on the other hand, was reported to have an antialcoholism effort that is comprehensive and progressive. To extend this survey of alcoholism problems and programs in Eastern Europe, and because the perusal of these programs was very useful for research at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Roumania and Bulgaria were visited in the summer . . .

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