VODKA
is a major cause of early death in Russia and has a direct impact on mortality
rates in men, research has shown.
Over
the past 30 years, changes in the availability of the national drink have been
reflected in premature death statistics, say scientists.
When
men could get their hands on more vodka, more of them died young.
A
new forward-looking study has found that Russian men who drink three or more
bottles of vodka a week are far more likely to go to an early grave than those
who consume less than one.
"Russian
death rates have fluctuated wildly over the past 30 years as alcohol
restrictions and social stability varied under Presidents Gorbachev, Yeltsin
and Putin, and the main thing driving these wild fluctuations in death was
vodka," said study co-author Professor Sir Richard Peto, from Oxford
University.
"This
has been shown in retrospective studies, and now we've confirmed it in a big,
reliable prospective study."
The
researchers asked 57,361 men in three Russian cities how much vodka they drank
and watched their progress for a decade.
They
estimated that, over a 20-year period, more than a third of male smokers
drinking at least three half-litre bottles of vodka a week could expect to die
between the ages of 35 and 54.
This
compared with a death rate of 16 per cent for men who consumed less than a
bottle a week. For men aged 55 to 74, the corresponding rates were 64 per cent
and 50 per cent.
Excess
deaths among heavy drinkers were linked to alcohol poisoning, accidents,
violence, suicide, and specific diseases such as throat and liver cancer,
tuberculosis, pneumonia and pancreatitis.
The
findings are published in the latest edition of The Lancet medical journal.
"Because
some who said they were light drinkers later became heavy drinkers, and vice
versa, the differences in mortality that we observed must substantially
under-estimate the real hazards of persistent heavy drinking," said
co-author Dr Paul Brennan.
Commenting
on the research, Christopher Allen, senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart
Foundation, said the study graphically highlights the toll that heavy drinking
has wreaked on communities in Russia.
"With
the Winter Olympics fast approaching, it's a timely reminder of what we already
know about drinking too much alcohol - it not only raises your risk of heart
and circulatory disease, but also your risk of liver disease and some
cancers," he said.
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