3.2% of EU children have unmet needs for medical care
                
            Key Figures on European living conditions 2025 edition, published in September, provides a comprehensive overview of how Europeans live today. This publication covers topics from income distribution and inequality to households, work intensity and childcare and health, disability and discrimination. Today, we focus on health, highlighting children’s unmet needs for medical care.
In 2024, 3.2% of children in the EU had unmet needs for medical care. This share was 3.0% for children living in households with a disposable income above the national at-risk-of-poverty threshold (60% of the median equivalised income) and 4.2% for those living in households with their disposable income below the threshold, a difference of 1.2 percentage points.
In most EU countries, the share of children with unmet needs for medical care was higher in households with their disposable income below the threshold, with the largest difference (6.1 percentage points) observed in Bulgaria. However, in 10 EU countries this share was lower for children living in households below the at-risk-of-poverty threshold, with the largest difference in this direction observed in Finland.
Source dataset: ilc_hch14
The Key Figures on European living conditions publication offers essential data on the EU and allows you to compare developments across EU countries and EFTA countries. For a more detailed view of the EU’s performance in other fields, explore other Key figures publications.
This news article marks World Health Summit 2025, being held in Berlin under the theme "Taking Responsibility for Health in a Fragmenting World". 
 
For more information
- Key figures on living conditions 2025 edition
 - Health in the European Union - facts and figures – online publication
 - Infographic on children in the EU
 - Thematic section on income and living conditions
 - Thematic section on children and youth
 - Thematic section on health
 - Key figures publications
 
Methodological notes
Medical care refers to individual health care services (examinations or treatments) provided by or under direct supervision of medical doctors, traditional and complementary medical or equivalent professions according to national health care systems. Included is health care provided for different purposes (curative, rehabilitative, long-term health care) and by different modes of provision (inpatient, outpatient, day, and home care), medical mental health care, and preventive medical services. Excluded is taking prescribed or non-prescribed drugs, and dental care.
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