Vita Karpuskiene, a lecturer at Vilnius University's Faculty of Economics and Business Management, says the figures of the past 12 months show that stricter measures have not encouraged people to consume less alcohol.

"The number of non-drinkers has dropped but we could soften and say that it’s not that the number of drinkers has increased but the key habits have not changed. The introduced measures have not encouraged people to drink less over the past 12 months, and our data proved that fact," Karpuskiene told a press conference on Wednesday.

64 percent of respondents said they consumed alcohol over the past 12 months (57 percent in 2016), and 34 percent said they did not (41 percent in 2016).

According to Karpuskiene, episodes of heavy drinking when at least 6 standard alcohol units are consumed have become rarer but this rate has barely changed in the group of binge-drinkers.

"Episodes of heavy drinking have become rarer. But there are more people who said there were such episodes over the past 12 months. 48 percent said there were no such episodes during the past 12 months," the researcher said. "But if look into that group of heavy drinkers, these episodes have not changed."

People were grouped into four groups, including binge-drinkers, regular drinkers, occasional drinkers and non-drinkers, as part of the survey to identify their alcohol consumption habits.

The sale of alcohol to people under 20 was banned in Lithuania in 2018, and the country introduced tougher advertising controls and increased excises.

It was already a third survey by Vilnius University into Lithuanians' alcohol consumption habits.

The survey of 1,104 people was carried out by Baltijos Tyrimai.

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