“…Our findings suggest that more effective alcohol policies and treatment services in the region may have added benefits in terms of reducing poor mental health, and studies from other regions have shown that treatment for harmful alcohol use can result in a reduction of symptoms of mental disorders (Baker, et al, 2010;Kelly, Stout, Magill, Tonigan, & Pagano, 2010). However, despite the high levels of harmful alcohol consumption and associated burden of poor mental and physical health, recent government alcohol control policies in the region have been marked by limited ambition, lack of engagement and fragmentation among key actors, whereas the larger alcohol producers have become very influential in blocking action (Gil, Polikina, Koroleva, Leon, & McKee, 2010;Nemtsov, 2011;Roberts, et al, 2012a;WHO, 2011a). Although there have been some price controls implemented in Russia on vodka and price controls proposed in Belarus and Ukraine, more concerted action is still urgently required in the fSU, especially given recent evidence that tax policies are equally effective in deterring alcohol consumption for those with high and lower propensity for alcohol use (Dave & Saffer, 2008).…”