eISSN: 2450-5722
ISSN: 2450-5927
Journal of Health Inequalities
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2/2019
vol. 5
 
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abstract:
Editorial

The alcohol crisis in Polish public health

Witold A. Zatoński
1, 2

1.
European Observatory of Health Inequalities, the President Stanisław Wojciechowski State University of Applied Sciences in Kalisz, Poland
2.
Health Promotion Foundation, Nadarzyn, Poland
J Health Inequal 2019; 5 (2): 122-123
Online publish date: 2019/12/30
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The decrease in spirits’ excise taxation in 2002 [1] and aggressive marketing and product innovation by the alcohol industry [2] have led to a prolonged “health recession” in Poland. Only now are we starting to understand the scale of the public health crisis this has precipitated. The development of the health situation in Poland since the Second World War has been characterised by rapid fluctuations in life expectancy [3]. The 1990s were a decade of health convergence with the West, as life expectancy increased by 4 years among Polish men and 3 years among Polish women. The decline in premature mortality in this period belonged to the quickest in Europe [4].
However, since 2003 Poland has experienced a return of increasing premature mortality among young and middle-aged adults. The main reason underpinning this trend is a sudden, dramatic rise in alcohol consumption [5] and the resulting increase in morbidity and mortality due to alcohol-related diseases and events [3, 4]. Poland has seen a freezing of life expectancy not dissimilar to the trend recently observed in the United States [6]. In both cases the reason was unifactorial and was the biomedical consequence of a sudden increase in the use of psychoactive substances (alcohol in Poland, opiates in the USA).
In the years 1991-2002 life expectancy in Poland grew by around 7% among men and by 5% among women annually. In the years 2003-2007 life expectancy growth stalled at 0.1% annually. In the years 2008-2013 it picked up slightly to 0.6% in men and 0.3% in women annually. Finally, in the years 2013-2017 stagnation in life expectancy has been observed once again. In 2018, for the first time in the 21st century, life expectancy in Poland has slightly decreased (Fig. 1).
In the last decade, apart from occasional research articles [3-5], there have not been any official publications or reports discussing the increase in alcohol consumption and its health effects in Poland. In a 2018 report by the Polish National Institute of Public Health – National Institute of Hygiene, the trends and structure of alcohol consumption in the last 15 years have not been highlighted [7]. Meanwhile, an OECD report, published in 2019, indicated that Poland is one of a handful of countries to have experienced an increase in alcohol consumption in the last decade [8]. The increase in the sale and consumption of alcohol in Poland in the years 2003-2018 from 6.5 to over 10 litres of pure spirit per year per...


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