-
Rahm says player concessions needed to save LIV Golf
-
Bowlers, Samson keep Chennai afloat in IPL playoff race
-
Rolling Stones announce July 10 release of new album 'Foreign Tongues'
-
France's Macron taps ex-aide to head central bank
-
PSG 'not here to defend' against Bayern, says Luis Enrique
-
Trump says he works out 'one minute a day' as he restores fitness award
-
Russia hits Ukraine with deadly strikes as Zelensky denounces Moscow's 'cynicism'
-
EU urges US to stick to tariff deal terms
-
Hantavirus on the Hondius: what we know
-
Rahm eligible for Ryder Cup after deal with European Tour
-
Stocks rise, oil falls as traders eye earnings, US-Iran ceasefire
-
Bayern's Kompany channels 'inner tranquility' before PSG showdown
-
Colombian mine explosion kills nine
-
Matthews latest England World Cup-winner out of Women's Six Nations
-
Race to find port for cruise ship battling deadly rodent virus
-
Celtic's O'Neill says Hearts' rise good for Scottish football
-
Ethiopia and Sudan accuse each other of attacks
-
Injured Mbappe faces backlash over Sardinia trip before Clasico
-
Vodafone to take full ownership of UK mobile operator
-
Stocks advance, oil falls as traders eye US-Iran ceasefire
-
Sabalenka ready to boycott Grand Slams over prize money
-
Boko Haram attack on Chad army base kills at least 24: military, local officials
-
US trade gap widens in March as AI spending boosts imports
-
US threatens 'devastating' response to any Iran attack on shipping
-
Murphy warns snooker hopefuls to 'work harder' to match Chinese stars
-
Race to find port for hantavirus-stricken cruise ship
-
Romanian pro-EU PM loses no-confidence motion
-
Edin Terzic to become Athletic Bilbao coach next season
-
Borthwick backed by RFU to take England to 2027 Rugby World Cup
-
EU hails 'leap forward' in ties with Russia's ally Armenia
-
German car-ramming suspect had mental health problems: reports
-
Pyongyang calling: North Korea shows off own-brand phones
-
Iran warns 'not even started' in Hormuz
-
World body in dark over allegations against China badminton chief
-
Asian stocks drop amid fears over US-Iran ceasefire
-
China fireworks factory explosion kills 26, injures 61
-
China hails 'our era' as Wu Yize's world snooker triumph goes viral
-
Ex-model accuses French scout of grooming her for Epstein
-
Timberwolves eclipse Spurs as Knicks rout Sixers
-
Taiwan leader says island has 'right to engage with the world'
-
Yoko says oh no to 'John Lemon' beer
-
Bayern's Kompany promises repeat fireworks in PSG Champions League semi
-
A coaching great? Luis Enrique has PSG on brink of another Champions League final
-
Top five moments from the Met Gala
-
Brunson leads Knicks in rout of Sixers
-
Retiring great Sophie Devine wants New Zealand back playing Tests
-
Ukraine pressures Russia as midnight ceasefire looms
-
Stocks sink amid fears over US-Iran ceasefire
-
G7 trade ministers set to meet but not discuss latest US tariff threat
-
Sherlock Holmes fans recreate fateful duel at Swiss falls
'A question of time': experts fear Balkans measles outbreak
Despite vaccinating her first child, Vanja drew a line when it came time to inoculate her second and decided he would not be receiving the measles shot.
The 44-year-old psychologist living in Montenegro's capital Podgorica gave a host of reasons why she changed her mind, all after binging on a deluge of information shared in an online group she belongs to.
"I don't trust the vaccination system. We lack information and education," Vanja told AFP, asking that her surname be withheld.
"I feel great responsibility and it wasn't a simple and easy decision to make."
Vanja's position is increasingly common in Montenegro which has the lowest measles vaccine uptake globally with just 23.8 percent of infants inoculated in 2020 with the first of two shots, according to World Health Organization data.
The dramatic decline in inoculation rates has public health experts bracing for an imminent measles outbreak in Montenegro and its nearby Balkan neighbours where vaccination uptake has also plummeted, largely due to a rise in misinformation, especially during the Covid-19 pandemic.
"The risk of a measles outbreak is high," Dragan Jankovic, an immunisation official with the WHO, told AFP.
"Importation of the measles virus is only a question of time... as soon as it is imported into a susceptible population, an outbreak will start."
In neighbouring North Macedonia, 63 percent of children were inoculated with the first shot of the combined measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine, while in Serbia 78 percent have had the jab.
- 'Perfect storm' -
Experts say a uptake of at least 95 percent of the two-dose jab is needed to avoid the spread of measles, a highly contagious airborne disease that can be fatal.
The virus can cause complications that include blindness, brain swelling and pneumonia, and unvaccinated children are at the highest risk of developing serious cases -- including death.
But for decades, there has been an aversion to the MMR shot, rooted in rampant misinformation tied to a widely debunked 1998 study that suggested a link between autism and the vaccine.
The United Nations has repeatedly warned that a "perfect storm" was brewing for new outbreaks of preventable diseases, with the pandemic disrupting routine vaccinations.
And even after the measles killed over 207,000 people worldwide in 2019, vaccination rates still dropped in many parts of the globe.
The first-dose vaccination rate dropped from 86 to 84 percent globally between 2019 and 2020, while only 70 percent received a second dose during the same period, according to WHO data.
In the Balkans, epidemiologists chalk up the growing anti-vax sentiment to several factors, including distrust in the government, a lack of serious enforcement measures, and a deluge of misinformation that overwhelmed social media during the pandemic.
In Montenegro, doctors have called on the government to take the issue more seriously, saying small fines on parents who refuse mandatory vaccine mandates have done little to reverse the country's anti-vax shift.
"The MMR vaccine is currently not a condition for enrolment in schools and kindergartens," Milena Popovic Samardzic, an epidemiologist from Montenegro's Institute of Public Health, told AFP.
Almost one-third of Montenegrins believe a conspiracy theory that alleges doctors and government seek to vaccinate children with shots that cause autism, according to an Ipsos survey published in 2021.
The same report also found that over half of the country's population are convinced that "global elites" created the coronavirus in order to slash the planet's population.
- 'Fed up' -
In Serbia, the vaccine is mandatory for student enrolment but experts say officials often turn a blind eye to the problem until an outbreak forces their hand.
"The state only needs to follow the rules they set out," said Georgios Konstantinidis, the head of Serbia's paediatrics association.
"But nobody does -- neither the parents nor the people in kindergartens who enrol kids through 'connections'."
Serbia was last hit by a measles outbreak in 2017, resulting in 3,800 recorded cases and 12 deaths, including two children.
In wake of the outbreak, state prosecutors launched proceedings against 43 prominent anti-vaxers for "causing panic", but none were convicted, according to Vladimir Cimerman, a Belgrade doctor who helped bring a lawsuit.
Doctors in Serbia are increasingly frustrated that warnings go ignored.
"We lack social responsibility. I'm fed up with everything," said Konstantinidis.
"Basic humanity has vanished from this society, and the whole world for that matter."
V.Fontes--PC