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Terminal Patients In Poland Ask For The Right To Say Goodbye To Their Pets

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A final visit from a beloved pet can bring the feeling of home into the hospital. Credit: Monkey Business Images / Shutterstock

For some patients in hospice or palliative care, the hardest separation is not only from home, but from the animal that makes it one. A proposed law in Poland would give dying patients the right to receive pet visits, raising difficult questions for hospitals in Spain, the UK and across Europe.

One last pet visit can matter so much at the end of life

For many people, a dog or cat is not just a pet. It is another family member that follows them from room to room, loves unconditionally, waits by the door, sleeps beside the bed and somehow knows when we need their company.

In Poland the question being raised is if a dying patient should have to spend their final days cut off from the animal they love?

Polish MPs have proposed a legal change that would give patients in stationary hospices and palliative medicine wards the right to have contact with their domestic animals. The proposal would amend Poland’s Act on Patient Rights and the Patient Rights Ombudsman, meaning pet visits would no longer depend only on whether a hospital or hospice decides to allow them.

The debate has been shaped by deeply human cases in Warsaw. One woman with advanced cancer was reportedly more worried about the dog waiting at home than about herself. Another seriously ill patient was reunited with his cats in a palliative ward, a moment doctors said showed how much comfort an animal can bring when words are no longer enough.

In practice, the rule would affect the kind of moment that rarely fits neatly into hospital policy: a patient asking to see the dog that has slept beside them for years, or the cat still being cared for by relatives at home.

How Poland’s proposal would turn comfort into a patient right

The Polish proposal would not create an open-door rule for animals in hospitals. Managers would still be able to refuse or restrict visits logically where there are infection risks, safety concerns or practical barriers.

Hospitals also have to protect other patients, staff and visitors. While some wards care for people with weakened immune systems and others have strict hygiene rules or limited space.

But the important change is where the conversation begins. Instead of families asking for an exception, the patient’s need for contact with a beloved animal would be recognised in law.

That shift in the Polish case could influence other European countries to follow suit. It asks whether emotional comfort at the end of life should be treated as an optional extra, or as part of dignified care. 

Patients in Spain depend completely on individual hospital rules

Spain does not appear to have a single national rule giving hospital patients a general right to see their pets. Instead, the answer depends on the hospital, the region and the patient’s condition.

In Andalucía, the Hospital Civil in Málaga launched “Tu mascota te acompaña”, meaning “Your pet accompanies you”, through its palliative care unit in 2025. The programme is aimed at terminal patients who have expressed the wish to say goodbye to their companion animal before their last day in hospital.

The scheme allows authorised and identified pets to visit under agreed safety rules. It is a compassionate model, but still a local programme rather than a national guarantee.

How UK patients face the same emotional uncertainty 

In the UK, pet visits also depend heavily on local rules.

Royal College of Nursing guidance says patients’ own pet dogs are generally not permitted in healthcare settings, except in exceptional circumstances. Hospices and some care settings are among the places where such visits may be appropriate.

Some NHS hospital policies are more direct. Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, for example, permits domestic pets to visit end-of-life patients only, while also warning about infection, allergies and patient safety.

These uncertainties and lack of general standing rules could sound unreasonable and without sense. A patient is allowed many human visitors, but not the dog or cat that has been a part of their family and daily life for years.

Hospices are often more flexible than acute hospitals, but permission is still usually needed in advance. The visit may require veterinary documents, a lead or carrier, a responsible handler and agreement from staff.

Europe is slowly making space for animals in care

Other European countries show that the idea is spreading. In France, residents in care homes known as Ehpad and independent living residences can now keep pets under certain conditions linked to hygiene, safety and the resident’s ability to care for the animal.

French hospitals are also experimenting. In Paris, Pitié-Salpêtrière hospital has introduced a protocol allowing dogs and cats to visit hospitalised patients under strict hygiene conditions and individual assessment.

In Italy, some local health authorities permit dogs and cats to enter inpatient healthcare facilities if families meet set rules. 

It would seem that Europe is beginning to recognise the emotional role of animals in illness, but remains to take any concrete action towards legitimising the issue. 

How families can ask for permission for a visit

Families hoping to arrange a pet visit should ask as early as possible, especially if a patient is in palliative care or facing a long hospital stay.

Most hospitals that allow visits will want proof that the animal is healthy, vaccinated and under control. Visits may be refused if the patient is clinically unstable, in isolation, dependent on continuous oxygen, severely immunocompromised, allergic risk is high or the animal is likely to become distressed.

Poland’s proposal has put a quiet but painful question into public view. In the final days of life, should a pet be considered another familiar visitor, as it may be their strongest link to emotional connection and their home?

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Spain’s Heat Reaches Highest Level In 76 Years

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AEMET says Spain’s heatwaves are becoming more frequent and more intense. Credit : Mazur Travel, Shutterstock

Spain has reached another climate milestone, and this time it is one that meteorologists say has not happened in at least 76 years. According to provisional figures from Spain’s State Meteorological Agency (AEMET), June 22 and June 23, 2026, were the hottest days ever recorded for that point in the year since records began in 1950.

The figures also come with another warning. Scientists believe the heatwaves Spain has experienced in recent years are becoming more frequent, lasting longer and arriving earlier in the summer, with new projections suggesting the country could face far more days of extreme heat in the decades ahead.

The latest heatwave may have felt exceptional to millions of people, but AEMET‘s analysis suggests it is also part of a much bigger pattern. From record breaking temperatures in northern Spain to increasingly hot nights in major cities, the country’s climate is showing changes that are becoming harder to dismiss with each passing summer.

Spain’s hottest June days on record have rewritten the history books

The figures published by AEMET are still provisional because calculations were made before the latest heatwave had completely ended. Even so, they already reveal something extraordinary.

An analysis by José Ángel Núñez Mora, Head of Climatology at AEMET in the Valencian Community, found that June 22 and June 23 recorded an average temperature anomaly of 7.1C above normal across mainland Spain. In simple terms, the country was more than seven degrees hotter than would usually be expected for those dates.

That comfortably surpassed the previous June record, which had only been set on June 30, 2025.

Perhaps even more remarkable is where June 23 now sits in Spain’s climate history.

Across the entire historical record, regardless of the season, it has become the 21st hottest day ever measured in mainland Spain. Almost every day ranked above it belongs to July or August, with only one exception dating back to July 1995.

For meteorologists, that matters because June has traditionally been the month when temperatures are still building towards their summer peak. Seeing figures like these before July begins shows how much earlier intense heat is arriving.

Northern Spain saw some of its most extraordinary temperatures ever recorded

The south of Spain is no stranger to temperatures above 40C, but one of the biggest stories from this heatwave unfolded hundreds of kilometres further north.

On June 23, Tama, in Cantabria’s Liébana region, reached 43.7C, setting a new all time maximum temperature record for the region during any month of the year.

Bilbao also experienced something that had never happened before.

Weather observations there date back to 1947, yet the city had never exceeded 40C on three separate days in the same month. This June it happened on June 21, June 23 and June 24.

The 42.7C recorded on June 24 also became the highest temperature ever measured there during either June or July.

For many people living in northern Spain, these were temperatures more commonly associated with parts of Andalusia than the Bay of Biscay.

The contrast illustrates how widely this latest heatwave spread across the country, reaching areas that have historically escaped the worst of Spain’s summer extremes.

Heatwaves are becoming more common and nights are staying hotter for longer

Individual records often grab the headlines, but AEMET says the long term figures tell an equally important story.

Between 1975 and 2025, Spain experienced 78 official heatwaves, adding up to 458 days of extreme heat.

What stands out is how quickly those numbers have changed.

During the first half of that period, from 1975 to 2000, Spain recorded 129 heatwave days. Between 2001 and 2025, the figure rose to 329 days, more than twice as many.

The last decade shows an even clearer picture. Spain has averaged around 22 heatwave days every year, compared with roughly three days annually during the late 1970s and early 1980s.

According to AEMET, heatwaves are now tending to cover larger areas of the country while producing stronger temperature anomalies than they did in previous decades.

The agency’s projections suggest that trend is likely to continue.

If greenhouse gas emissions follow an intermediate scenario, Spain could experience around 47 heatwave days each year by the end of the century.

Under higher emission scenarios, that average could increase to around 60 days annually, while the most severe projections point to 77 days of heatwave conditions every year.

The daytime heat is only part of the picture.

Summer nights have also become steadily warmer, particularly along the Mediterranean coast, where cities often struggle to cool after sunset because of the combined effects of climate change and the urban heat island effect.

Barcelona and Valencia now experience far more tropical nights, when temperatures stay above 20C, than they did during the second half of the twentieth century. Madrid has also recorded a marked increase at both the Barajas and Retiro observatories.

According to AEMET, the warming is primarily linked to the increase in greenhouse gases produced by burning fossil fuels. Weather balloon observations show the rise in temperature is not limited to the ground. It extends throughout the lower atmosphere, reinforcing the conclusion that Spain’s climate is continuing to warm.

For most people, the latest heatwave will be remembered for uncomfortable nights, relentless sunshine and soaring daytime temperatures. For meteorologists, it also leaves another set of figures showing that what once counted as exceptional is becoming increasingly familiar. As summer has only just begun, AEMET says more heatwaves are likely to arrive before the season is over.

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Mijas Pueblo Glows And Flickers With 15,000 Candles In Magical July Festival

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The soul of Mijas by candlelight. Credit: EWN

Visitors to Mijas Pueblo can experience one of the Costa del Sol’s most charming white villages bathed in the warm flicker of thousands of candles this summer. Mijas Pueblo prepares for its third year of Mijas with Soul in Candlelight, running from July 2 to 5. Organisers will place more than 15,000 candles throughout the historic centre to create an enchanting atmosphere that brings out the nighttime beauty of its whitewashed buildings and flower-filled streets.

Candlelit streets transform the historic centre

Planners are focusing on the candle display being in the most picturesque spots across the old town. Key locations include Calle Malaga and Calle San Sebastian, two of the most photographed streets in the village. Plaza de la Libertad and Plaza de la Constitucion also feature prominently. Additional highlights cover Calle Los Canos, Avenida del Compas, and the Paseo de la Muralla, where candlelight combines beautifully with sea views over the Mediterranean.

Full programme offers something for every visitor

This four-night celebration goes far beyond just the candles. Those out to enjoy the cooling night air will discover a rich mix of cultural and family activities. Thursday, July 2 opens the artisan market and food area while dedicating the day to children. All the mediaeval-styled rides in Plaza de la Constitucion will cost only €2. Three musical processions will add to the evening entertainment.

Friday, July 3, brings the official opening at 8pm with the main candle lighting. Streets then fill with roaming performances, including belly dance shows, stilt-walkers and fire-breathing displays.

Throughout the weekend, live blacksmithing and wood-carving workshops invite hands-on participation. One special feature this year involves the Tree of Wishes, where people hang personal notes before a later burning ritual symbolises hope for their fulfilment.

Practical travel information for a smooth visit

Large crowds are expected in the upper village area during the first weekend of July. Local authorities have arranged special shuttle buses to ease traffic and parking pressure. These continuous services link the event from La Cala de Mijas, Las Lagunas, and the former quarry in Mijas Pueblo, which serves as a large car park. The village itself will no doubt be blocked to most incoming traffic by local police to make sure the village does not get clogged with traffic.

Families and couples will find plenty to enjoy across the nights, while the overall setting delivers memorable photos and romantic walks. Early planning helps visitors make the most of this popular summer tradition in Mijas.

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Velez-Malaga Brings In Night Bus Service Connecting To Torre Del Mar

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Bus from Velez to Torre del Mar. Credit: PorMiPueblo Velez

Transport department staff at Velez-Malaga council have confirmed plans to kick-start a special night bus operation between the town and Torre del Mar beginning on July 1 and continuing until August 31. Last buses will run until half past two each night under the new summer timetable.

Councillor Celestino Rivas outlined the details on Friday, June 26, and stated that the extra service meets the clear need created by greater movement of people during the main holiday weeks. Many cultural events, local festivals and outdoor leisure pursuits take place at night in this period, leading to more demand for transport after usual hours.

Daytime connections therefore gain extra late running to cover travel from ten thirty in the evening right through to two thirty the next morning. People can now attend evening activities and make their way home using public transport instead of driving.

Summer night bus timetables

Four departures leave Velez-Malaga each night bound for Torre del Mar, timed for ten thirty, eleven thirty, half past midnight and two in the morning. Return trips from Torre del Mar depart at eleven in the evening, midnight, one in the morning and half past two.

Council planners chose these intervals to give decent coverage across the main residential areas and to manage passenger numbers effectively during the busiest parts of the night.

Benefits of extended public rransport

Residents will get a new practical option for moving between the two locations without personally having to take the car after dark. Holidaymakers also find it easier to explore both the town centre and the beachside area during their stays. Extra bus journeys will help ease road congestion that often builds up when large numbers of visitors head out for evening entertainment.

The council sees the measure as a way to support the local economy by making it simpler for everyone to participate in summer activities across the Velez-Malaga municipality. Operation of the service forms part of wider efforts to maintain good mobility standards when visitor numbers reach their highest points of the year.

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