
Europe reports highest number of measles cases in over 25 years
That figure was double the number of cases in 2023, according to a report by the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF.
Measles cases in the European region, which includes parts of Central Asia, have been "generally declining" in Europe since a peak in 1997 with 216,000 cases, WHO and UNICEF said. There was a low of 4,440 cases in 2016.
UNICEF said that about 40 per cent of measles infections in Europe and Central Asia were in children under 5 and that more than half of all people sickened by measles had to be hospitalised.
Measles is among the world's most infectious diseases and is spread by an airborne virus.
Two doses of the measles vaccine are estimated to be 97 per cent effective in preventing the disease, which typically infects the respiratory system and causes symptoms including fever, cough, runny nose, and a rash.
In serious cases, measles can cause pneumonia, encephalitis, dehydration, and blindness.
"Measles is back, and it's a wake-up call," Dr Hans Kluge, WHO's Europe director, said in a statement. "Without high vaccination rates, there is no health security," he added.
Romania had the most measles infections, at more than 30,000, followed by Kazakhstan, which reported 28,147 people with measles.
WHO and UNICEF noted that in both Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro, fewer than 70 per cent and 50 per cent of children in those countries respectively have been vaccinated against measles for at least the past five years.
Scientists estimate that more than 95 per cent of the population needs to be immunised to prevent outbreaks.
"Measles is pretty much completely vaccine-preventable. Two doses of the measles vaccines prevent infection, illness, and thus transmission," said Dr Michael Head, senior research fellow in global health at the University of Southampton in the UK.
"With a high global uptake, the world could eradicate this disease. However, measles is incredibly infectious, more so than for example the COVID-19 variants. With even slight declines in vaccine uptake, outbreaks are inevitable," he added in a statement.
After a drop in immunisation coverage during the coronavirus pandemic, measles cases surged in 2023 and 2024, with vaccination rates in numerous countries still lower than what they were before COVID-19 hit.
People who retire abroad are lonelier than those who live out their golden years in their home countries, a new study from the Netherlands suggests.
Moving to a new country in old age can be appealing for many reasons – a better quality of life, lower cost of living, or just enjoying the sun year-round. But it can also mean dealing with a new bureaucratic system, language, and building a social life from scratch.
That could take a toll – and come with health consequences. Older people are particularly vulnerable to loneliness and social isolation, which raise the risk of depression, heart disease, and cognitive decline.
'Migrating abroad around the age of retirement may seem like a fun thing to do,' Esma Betül Savaş, the new study's lead author and a researcher at the Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute, told Euronews Health.
'But it's also important to consider, before moving, the impacts that migrating may have in your life'.
The analysis, published in the journal Psychology and Aging, looked at two types of loneliness: social loneliness, which is due to a lack of a social network or sense of community, and emotional loneliness from not having intimate ties, like a romantic partner.
The study included about 5,000 Dutch people who were 65 or older and had moved to a new country after they were 50, as well as about 1,300 Dutch retirees who lived in the Netherlands.
People who retired abroad were more likely than those who stayed in the Netherlands to be socially lonely – but they were not at higher risk of emotional loneliness, the study found.
'They are fulfilled in this intimate connection, but then their broader social network is interrupted,' Savaş said.
'We see that they are not satisfied with their social network now in the destination [country], more so than non-migrants'.
That seems to be the result of how strong their ties were in the Netherlands, and how well they adjusted to their adopted homeland.
For example, immigrants who had lost contact with their children or good friends in the Netherlands were lonelier. Meanwhile, those who felt a sense of belonging in their new homes and were in touch with their neighbours were less likely to be lonely.
'We know that moving to a new country, especially at an older age, not all of them know the destination language,' she said. 'They may be establishing a network but that might not be as strong as the network they built over the years' at home.
The new findings underscore that loneliness is about more than a lack of social connections. It's also about the strength of people's relationships, Savaş said.
In other words, it's quality over quantity.
Notably, retirees who moved abroad were more likely to have romantic partners than people who stayed in the Netherlands, the study found.
They also tended to be healthier and wealthier, factors that can protect against loneliness. That made the new findings more surprising.
Who chooses to move abroad for retirement – and how far away they move – could also play a role.
People who retire abroad are more likely to be adventurous and identify with hippie culture than those who stay in the Netherlands, according to prior research from the same team.
Single Dutch men are also more likely than couples to retire in countries like Thailand and the Philippines.
In the new study, older people who moved further from the Netherlands were more likely to be emotionally lonely, which could reflect that lack of partnership, Savaş said.
Ultimately, Savaş said older adults considering a move abroad – whether from the Netherlands, Greece, or anywhere else – should try to stay connected with longtime friends and family while they form deeper connections in their new home. It doesn't hurt to take the plunge with a partner, either.
Loneliness, she said, isn't just about being single or having an empty social calendar. It's about a mismatch between the relationships we want and the relationships we have.
'It's about expectations, at the end of the day,' she said.

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'The most advanced social prescribing communities recognise all of that,' Hotz said. Link workers are key In some cases, link workers have helped physicians rethink what might improve patients' health. When Viaux joined the Brandenburg clinic, doctors initially gave her a list of services, including the Red Cross, a church, and migration support. But Viaux had some ideas of her own. 'She had a new brochure [that included] many more ideas we didn't even consider,' Dr Benjamin Senst told Euronews Health, such as local clubs, sports leagues, nature, and art. 'This was so eye-opening,' Senst said. It 'went beyond the well-established, basic structures of social support, to something broader [that] also addresses certain problems with disease and social diagnosis'. Having strong link workers, who are sometimes called bridge-builders or community health nurses, appears to be the key to making social prescribing programmes work. Everington ticked off a list of qualities they should have: emotionally intelligent, creative problem-solvers who go the extra mile to support and motivate people. 'A sign-poster might just say, 'the swimming pool is there,' Everington told Euronews Health. 'A social prescriber will say, 'well, actually, there's all female sessions.' Or, 'by the way, there's lots of people who are very overweight, so don't feel body-shy about going swimming.' Or, 'this time of day, the pools are actually empty''. 'It's actually [about] how you get somebody to go through the door, not just pointing them to the door,' he added. Viaux worked with one older woman, for example, who had mental health issues and obesity and used a wheelchair. While a doctor might have advised her to work out more, Viaux found her a water exercise programme after she said she wasn't comfortable attending a tai chi class due to her weight. She also helped the woman overcome bureaucratic hurdles to get a new wheelchair. 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'But a social prescription will often have all these intangible benefits, like giving us more confidence, getting us out of the house more, [and] helping us to adopt other healthy behaviours'. Social prescribing also isn't a silver bullet solution to all of society's ills. As one research team put it, these programmes are 'not a quick fix to address problems of inequality and social exclusion in disadvantaged areas'. That's exactly what the new research project aims to explore, with nearly nearly €7 million in funding from the European Union. It will run a randomised trial that splits patients into two groups: one that gets social prescribing and one that receives standard care, so researchers can determine what impact the approach has on vulnerable groups. 'There are things which seem to make total sense and [be] very good, but in the end, they do not show positive effects,' Herrmann said. 'We would like to see if there are really positive effects,' with the goal of influencing health policy decisions across Europe. In the meantime, Everington is continuing to push for social prescribing – which the UK government committed to rolling out in primary care clinics nationwide in 2019 – to enter the global mainstream. He said his London clinic, which runs more than 100 social prescribing projects, hosts thousands of visitors per year, including national health ministers interested in replicating his model. 'We learned very early on that you cannot describe it and get people to understand it by a document,' Everington said. 'You actually have to come and taste it, smell it, feel it, and talk to people who are actually doing it'. His personal enthusiasm may be another selling point. 'We have a cure for a hell of a lot of disease and illness, and it's called social prescribing,' Everington said. 'This is the magic medicine that we've been looking for'.