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Friday, 16 May 2025
Australia's childhood vaccination rates are declining, sparking fears about risk to herd immunity.
Vaccination rates among children, including at 12 months of age, are declining. (Pexels: Jonathan Borba)
In short:
Australia's
childhood vaccination rates have steadily declined since COVID-19,
dropping below the coverage required to achieve herd immunity from some
diseases.
The data covers vaccinations including whooping cough, tetanus, rotavirus, four types of meningococcal, measles and the mumps.
What's next?
Experts say urgent action is needed to encourage more parents to get their children vaccinated.
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Vaccination
rates among children and teens have reached "critical" levels,
according to experts, who are warning deaths are inevitable if Australia
does not do more to turn around a steady decline in immunisation rates.
Figures
from the National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance
(NCIRS), released on Thursday, show a widespread decline in
immunisations for a range of illnesses over the past five years.
In some cases, rates are now below the threshold required to ensure herd immunity.
The
data includes vaccines for a wide range of diseases, including whooping
cough, diphtheria, tetanus, rotavirus, pneumococcal, polio, hepatitis
B, four types of meningococcal, measles, mumps and rubella, as well as the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine for teens.
Gary
Grohmann, director of the Immunisation Coalition and former consultant
to the World Health Organization, described the figures as "absolutely
alarming".
The figures show the
proportion of children up-to-date with their immunisations by the age
of 12 months had fallen from 94.8 per cent to 91.6 per cent since 2020.
The
percentage of those fully vaccinated by age two was down from 92.1 per
cent to 89.4 per cent in the same time frame, and those who had received
all required immunisations for age five fell from 94.8 per cent to 92.7
per cent.
The
most concerning falls were among teens where uptake of the HPV vaccine —
which helps protect against cervical cancer in girls and other genital
cancers in boys — has dropped from 84.9 per cent to 77.9 per cent among
boys and from 86.6 per cent to 81.1 per cent among girls in five years.
"When you look at the adolescent data where it's dropping well below 80 per cent that is really concerning," Dr Grohmann said.
"If
you're starting to get into the 80 per cent [range], then it really is
getting critical. We know as virologists, microbiologists, that we do
need about 95 per cent of the whole population vaccinated."
Dr
Grohmann was most concerned about parts of Australia where recent data
revealed as few as 75 per cent of two-year-olds have had their required
vaccinations.
"We will see further spread of disease, particularly measles,"
he said.
"It
is a numbers game. There will be more hospitalisations. And although we
have really good medical care in Australia, it could be that children
will die of measles or get serious disease.
"It
means basically that disease spread will increase and unfortunately
hospitalisations and possibly deaths to viruses like measles might also
occur."
The
numbers have put Australia's vaccination program back to levels not
seen since 2014, said Frank Beard, an associate director at the NCIRS
which collated the figures.
He
told the ABC the drop in vaccinations undid work to boost rates that saw
measles almost eliminated nationally prior to the pandemic.
"It is definitely a concern that there's a decreasing trend since the pandemic," Dr Beard said.
"Herd protection is always a concern, and particularly for diseases like measles."
'This is Ash's legacy'
Bruce and Ashley Langoulant have firsthand experience of the impacts of a vaccine-preventable disease.
Ashley, now 35, was just six months old when she came down with meningitis brought on by pneumococcal infection.
Mr
Langoulant said even though it happened in 1989, he still vividly
remembers rushing his baby daughter to the emergency room with seizures,
a fever and a raised fontanelle.
"She was almost lifeless," he said.
Bruce Langoulant with his daughter Ashleigh, who contracted pneumococcal as a child and lives with disability as a result. (Supplied)
His little girl rapidly declined over the next 24 hours.
She survived but with profound intellectual and physical disability.
She has cerebral palsy, epilepsy and she is deaf, non-verbal and uses a wheelchair.
"I don't even know if she knows we're her parents," Mr Langoulant said.
When Ashley was born, there was no vaccine yet for pneumococcal.
In
the early 2000s when one was developed, Mr Langoulant, as chair of the
Meningitis Centre Australia, was crucial to getting it listed on the
National Immunisation Program.
He's at a loss as to why parents would not take up a free vaccine.
"Ash was the unvaccinated child. We didn't have a choice and we're still living it 35 years later," he said.
"Ash is in a wheelchair because she got a bacterial infection which is vaccine-preventable.
"This is what happens if you don't vaccinate."
For the Langoulant family, Ash's experience is her legacy to the world.
"She has this natural presence which is a gift," Mr Langoulant said.
Call for catch-up pop-up clinics
Dr
Grohman and Dr Beard both said more widespread public health measures
seen during the pandemic, such as vaccine clinics, mobile and pop-up
clinics and after-hours clinics, were needed to help increase vaccine
uptake.
The National
Vaccination Insights project run in collaboration with NCIRS found that
for about one in 10 patients, the cost of medical appointments was a
barrier to getting vaccines, and just getting an appointment on time was
a barrier for a similar number.
A
survey of 2,000 people found about six in 10 people said a hurdle for
them was "feeling distressed" when thinking about vaccinating their
child.
There are concerns about increasing cases of measles in Australia. (Norman Hermant)
General distrust of vaccines and health information continued to be barriers, as well.
Of
those parents with unvaccinated children, 46.7 per cent would "not feel
guilty" if their child got sick with a vaccine-preventable disease and
47.9 per cent do not believe vaccines are safe for a child.
"Vaccination
coverage is heading in the wrong direction, and so to turn it around,
we need to have a range of strategies to improve it," Dr Beard said.
Dr
Grohmann said medical professionals had a key role to play in educating
patients, particularly as more people got more medical information
online and the misinformation became widespread.
"It's
really important that they get the message that vaccination is really
important and protects the whole community. And most importantly,
they're effective and safe," he said.
Dr Beard said the decrease in teens getting vaccinated for HPV was also driven by a rise in school avoidance after the pandemic.
"Adolescent
vaccination is predominantly conducted in school settings and we know
that school attendance has still been lower than it was before the
pandemic," he said.
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