Alcohol control policy and alcohol‐attributable disease burden in Finland and the Baltic countries: A longitudinal study 1995–2019

Author:

Månsson Anastasia1ORCID,van der Velde Lode1,Karlsson Thomas2,Beekmann Lauri3,Jonsson Stenberg Elsa1,Haagsma Juanita4,Castelpietra Giulio56,Agardh Emilie E.1ORCID,Allebeck Peter1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Global Public Health Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

2. Department of Public Health and Welfare Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare Helsinki Finland

3. Tallinn Estonia

4. Department of Public Health Erasmus MC University Medical Center Rotterdam Rotterdam Netherlands

5. Department Adulte 2 Centre Neuchatelois de Psychiatrie Marin‐Epagnier Switzerland

6. Mental Health Flagship, Division of Country Health Policies and Systems WHO Regional Office for Europe Copenhagen Denmark

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionAlcohol remains a significant contributor to mortality and morbidity in Finland and the Baltic countries, particularly among men. This study aimed to assess alcohol policy restrictiveness in this region from 1995 to 2019 using a modified version of the Bridging the Gap (BtG‐M) policy scale and examine its association with alcohol‐related disease burden.MethodsThe study utilised national laws to score policy restrictiveness (higher BtG‐M scores mean stricter policies) and age‐standardised rates of disability‐adjusted life years (DALY), years of life lost, years lived with disability and deaths per 100,000 from the 2019 Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD). Spearman correlation tests and panel data regression models were applied to assess the association between policy score and burden of disease.ResultsFinland maintained a high BtG‐M score, while the Baltic countries experienced recent increases from initially lower scores. Alcohol‐related disease burden showed an inverse association with policy changes in these countries. Strongest association was seen between the BtG‐M score and DALY rates attributed to injuries. Premature mortality among men constituted the largest proportion of disease burden.Discussion and ConclusionsDespite challenges in accessing and comparing policy data over time, we showed a strong association between alcohol policy and alcohol‐related harm in Finland and the Baltic countries. This study is one of the first to use the BtG‐M scale to monitor changes in alcohol policies over time and their relationship to alcohol‐related harm using GBD methodology. The study highlights the effects of national alcohol policies on levels of alcohol‐related harm.

Funder

Forskningsrådet om Hälsa, Arbetsliv och Välfärd

Publisher

Wiley

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