Alcohol tax cuts and increase in alcohol-positive sudden deaths: a time-series intervention analysis

Addiction. 2007 Mar;102(3):362-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2006.01715.x.

Abstract

Aims: The impact of alcohol regulation changes in Finland during 2004 on alcohol-positive sudden deaths was analysed, focusing on: (1) removal of traveller's allowance quotas on alcohol imports from other European Union (EU) countries, (2) lowering of Finnish alcohol excise duty rates and (3) Estonia joining the EU.

Design: The impact of these changes was estimated using an autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) analytical technique. Post-mortem forensic toxicology data were analysed over a 15-year period to account for seasonal and long-term variation. In all, the data comprised a weekly series of 33,782 alcohol-positive cases (at least 0.20 mg/g alcohol in blood) and a control series of 37,617 alcohol-negative cases.

Setting: Finland in 1990-2004.

Findings: The liberation of traveller's allowances had no material impact on alcohol-positive sudden deaths, but the impact of alcohol tax cuts in March 2004 was significant, resulting in an estimated eight additional alcohol-positive deaths per week, which is a 17% increase compared with the weekly average of 2003. The impact associated with Estonia joining the EU was not statistically significant. In the models applied to the control series of alcohol-negative deaths, none of the impact coefficients was statistically significant.

Conclusions: Alcohol tax cuts were associated with an increase in the number of sudden deaths involving alcohol. This parallels the reported increases in alcohol consumption and alcohol-related causes of death in 2004 in Finland.

MeSH terms

  • Alcohol Drinking / economics*
  • Alcohol Drinking / mortality*
  • Death, Sudden / epidemiology*
  • Death, Sudden / etiology
  • Estonia
  • European Union
  • Finland / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Mortality / trends
  • Taxes / economics*