The European Journal of Public Health Advance Access originally published online on February 13, 2007
The European Journal of Public Health 2007 17(2):121; doi:10.1093/eurpub/ckm006
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Editorials |
The East-West Health Gap in Europewhat are the causes?
Witold ZatonskiDirector of the Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention Division, Cancer Center and Institute of Oncology 5 Roentgena Str., 02-781 Warsaw, Poland
Correspondence: Witold Zatonski, Director of the Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention Division, Cancer Center and Institute of Oncology, 5 Roentgena Str., 02-781 Warsaw, Poland, tel/fax: +48 22 643 92 34, e-mail: canepid{at}coi.waw.pl
One of the biggest challenges facing Europe is the East-West Health Gap. Historically, the transition from infectious to chronic diseases came first in Western Europe before occurring in Eastern Europe. However, after World War II, it went much more smoothly in the Former Socialistic Economy (FSE) countries. A quicker increase in life expectancy in the East (e.g. in Poland life expectancy at birth increased by 9 years among malesfrom 56.1 to 64.9 yearsin the period 19501960) led to an equalization of the health differences between Eastern and Western Europe during the early 1960s.1
Unexpectedly, the mid-1960s brought to the FSE countries a reversal in health development. During this time, adult mortality after the age of 20 began to increase, especially among men, while childhood mortality and infectious disease mortality continued to decline. All of those countries saw a sudden increase in mortality due to lung cancer, liver cirrhosis and sudden death from injury. The rapid decline in cardiovascular mortality which could be observed from the 1970s onwards in Western Europe did not occur in any of the FSE countries.1,2 On the contrary, in many FSE countries, cardiovascular mortality demonstrated a dramatic increase, especially among men. The divergence of mortality trends among young and middle-aged adults between Western Europe and the FSE countries led to a situation in the late 1980s, before the fall of Communism in Europe, in which the East-West Health Gap reached immense proportions.1
Furthermore, during the break up of the Soviet Communist system, the pace of increase of adult mortality rose rapidly in the majority of FSE countries.3 This explosion of adult premature mortality was particularly dramatic in the countries of the former Soviet Union and it reached its peak in the years 19921994. In those years more than one million additional premature deaths were observed.4 This increase of adult premature mortality, which was already observed for nearly 50 years in the vast majority of former Soviet Union countries, is relatively well publicized2,5,6 (bad news is good news), even though the public health community was rather powerless and never able to influence this phenomenon.
On the other hand, not all news from Eastern Europe is bad. In part of the FSE countries, notably in what we know as Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) (Poland, Czech and Slovak Republics, Hungary, Slovenia), a reversal in health tendencies occurred in the past 15 years, after 1990. Life expectancy began to increase rapidly in all these countries: for example in Polish males it increased by 4.5 years in the period 19912002.4
Except for the case of Poland,1,7,8 this phenomenon is poorly described and poorly understood, both by the countries it occurred in, and by the international community (good news is no news). The most fascinating phenomenon is the dramatic decline in morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular diseases.7,8 For example in Poland, this trend applies equally to males and females, all adult age groups, inhabitants of both rural and urban areas and less and better educated groups of population. The pace of this development is among the fastest ever observed in Europe.8
The cause of this spectacular reversal is not entirely clear. However, it seems that the most important candidates are dietary changes, resulting from the introduction of a market economy and changes in prices of various food items.8 The most significant factor could be increased consumption of polyunsaturated fatty acids, such as alpha-linolenic acid.7 The health improvement in Central Europe is just beginning and we still have a long way to close the gap. The dramatic natural experiments that are taking place in this region are pertinent to the entire continent, and the key role of the European public health specialists should be explaining them and initiating interventions in this field.
| Acknowledgments |
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The work on this manuscript was conducted within the European Commission Public Health Project: HEMClosing the GapReducing Premature Mortality. Baseline for Monitoring Health Evolution Following Enlargement (grant agreement no. 2003121) to the Cancer Centre and Institute of Oncology, Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention Division, Warsaw (Principal Investigator: Witold Zatonski).
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1 Zatonski W and Boyle P. (1996) Health transformations in Poland after 1988. J Epidemiol Biostat 1:18397.
2 Feachem R. (1994) Health decline in eastern Europe. Nature 367:3134.[CrossRef][Medline]
3 Cornia GA and Paniccia R. (2000) The Mortality Crisis in Transitional Economies(Oxford University Press, Oxford).
4 Zatonski W and Jha P. The Health Transformation in Eastern Europe after 1990: A Second Look. http://www.hem.home.pl/index.php?idm=58,59&cmd=1. Warsaw: Cancer Center and Institute of Oncology, 2000.
5 Dying too young. Addressing Premature Mortality and Ill Health Due to Non-Communicable Diseases and Injuries in the Russian Federation. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTECA/Resources/DTY-Final.pdf. Washington: Europe and Central Asia Human Development Department/The World Bank, 2005.
6 Leon DA, Chenet L, Shkolnikov VM, et al. (1997) Huge variation in Russian mortality rates 198494: artefact, alcohol, or what? Lancet 350:3838.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
7 Zatonski WA and Willett W. (2005) Changes in dietary fat and declining coronary heart disease in Poland: population based study. BMJ 331:1878.
8 Zatonski W, McMichael AJ, Powles JW. (1998) Ecological study of reasons for sharp decline in mortality from ischaemic heart disease in Poland since 1991. BMJ 316:104751.[Abstract]
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