HIV in Europe between progress and disparities in the fight against the virus
Between virtuous models and chronic delays, the fight against the virus tells more than any other statistic about the real state of European healthcare systems
In 2025, HIV is no longer a global health emergency, but remains an accurate indicator of inequality. This can be clearly seen in the European Union, where the battle against the virus is being played out on two opposing fronts: on the one hand the advanced and widespread prevention of countries such as Spain, and on the other the structural fragilities of south-eastern Europe, where stigma, bureaucracy and migration flows continue to slow down progress.
Europe as a whole has drastically reduced new infections over the last ten years. But beneath the surface of the data lies a rift that is not only health-related: it is political, economic and cultural. In the centres of Athens and Sofia, where infectious wards operate at the limit of resources, doctors speak of a 'silent emergency'. In Madrid, on the other hand, health authorities celebrate the 60% drop in new cases in a decade and the arrival of PrEP in pharmacies.
Meanwhile, cuts in international funding and growing migratory pressure risk reversing the trend in precisely the most exposed countries. HIV, today, is less a disease and more a litmus test of the European health system: where welfare holds, the virus retreats; where the meshes of care are loosened, it advances again.
Greece: between migration, stigma and bureaucracy
In Greece, HIV is intertwined with the migration crisis and an already fragile healthcare system. According to official data from the National Public Health Organisation, there were 650 new diagnoses in 2024, and almost 40 per cent of them involve people of non-Greek origin, mainly from sub-Saharan Africa and Eastern Europe. More than half of the positive migrants - 55% - come to treatment at an advanced stage, when the infection has already compromised the immune system. "The problem is not only access to treatment, but the delay in connecting patients to specialised centres, especially in refugee camps on islands," explains Dr Giota Lourida, infectious diseases specialist at the Evaggelismos Hospital in Athens.
Greece also provides free anti-retroviral therapy to undocumented migrants, but many remain in a 'grey zone': they lose access to the healthcare system once their asylum application is rejected, and can only receive basic medication, not complementary treatment.



