Pubdate: Mon, 28 Jun 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: Michael Wines, NYTimes ALCOHOL HAS DEATH GRIP ON RUSSIA MOSCOW -- Poverty and political chaos have surely taken their toll on this nation. But for a look at what is really corroding Russia's soul, take the day off and go to the beach. That is what Muscovites are doing this month, and they are perishing in numbers that would stagger most Westerners. In the first 20 days of June, 89 people drowned in Moscow rivers and reservoirs. Over a long holiday weekend in mid- June, police fished at least 13 bodies out of Moscow waters every day -- the average number of daily drownings for the entire United States. It is not just Moscow's problem. The annual drowning rate for Russia is 8 per 100,000, compared with 1.68 per 100,000 in the United States. Russian men, who account for the bulk of drownings, die at an annual rate of 1 in 5,700. "Those are huge numbers -- bigger than the murder rate in the U.S.," said Philip C. Graitcer, an Emory University professor and author of a paper on injury rates in the former Soviet Union, referring to the rate for Russian men. "They're astounding." But not to most Russians. They already know what autopsies of this month's drowned Muscovites show in black and white: 94 percent of the victims were officially drunk when they died. Alcohol has a death grip on this nation, and the statistics on drownings and other injuries show vividly how powerful that grip is. Russia has about twice the rate of fatal injuries, including murders and suicides, that the United States has. The death rate is roughly 1.5 times as high in Russia than in the United States for automobile accidents, three times as high for suicides, and five times as high for poisoning deaths. Killings are more common in Russia; fatal falls occur more often. Even Russian women die from drowning at twice the rate of Americans. But by far the heaviest toll is exacted on men, who statistics show drink more and die needlessly far more often than practically anywhere on earth. By some studies, men here drink eight times as much alcohol as do women, and their death rates from accidents and injuries far exceed those of women in almost every category -- from fires, for example, by three times; from alcohol poisoning, by a factor of five. "It's a terrible tragedy," said Sergei Yermakov, the principal researcher for the Russian Ministry of Public Health and an expert on mortality. "And unfortunately, the people who are responsible for social policy -- they don't understand that all of their forces should be aimed at prevention." Alcohol has historically been a major problem in Russia, dating to the time of the czars. As bad as the situation is today, it was far worse just five years ago when, in statistical terms, Russia bottomed out. From 1990 to 1994, the years when the old Soviet Union and, after its collapse in 1991, Russia were in the deepest throes of economic and social change, deaths from almost all causes skyrocketed. The death rate for injuries alone rose 83 percent. Yermakov and others attribute many, though not all, of those increases to the growing stresses placed on almost everyone during those days. That, combined with the end of the government monopoly on alcohol sales, triggered a huge increase in drinking, especially among men. "It was the pace of reform," said Vladimir Shkolnikov, a Russian Academy of Science mathematician who is probably the nation's leading expert on mortality. "It was labor force turnover, the magnitude of change in the early '90s." Curiously, the death statistics have fallen since then, back to the approximate levels of 1990 -- perhaps because many of the people most vulnerable to stress simply died off, some experts say. But it must be remembered that those levels -- and today's -- remain exceedingly high, Shkolnikov added. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart