Vaccine Preventable Diseases and Vaccination Coverage in Australia, 2001 to 2002 - Executive summary (Communicable Diseases Intelligence Vol 28 Suppl 2)

The full Vaccine Preventable Diseases and Vaccination Coverage in Australia, 2001 to 2002 report is available in 16 HTML documents. This document contains the Executive summary. The full report is also available in PDF format from the Table of contents page, either the full version or by chapter.

Page last updated: 31 January 2005

Julia Brotherton, Peter McIntyre, Michele Puech, Han Wang, Heather Gidding, Brynley Hull, Glenda Lawrence, Raina MacIntyre, Nicholas Wood, Donna Armstrong

Executive summary

Overview

This, the third biennial report on vaccine preventable diseases and vaccine coverage in Australia, brings together the four most important national sources of routinely collected data about vaccine preventable diseases and vaccination (deaths, notifications, hospitalisations and vaccination coverage) for all age groups between 2001 and 2002. The general trend towards improved control of disease and improved vaccine coverage is evident, particularly in the childhood years. Detailed results are available in 14 individual chapters.

Notifications, hospitalisations and deaths for 11 diseases are summarised in Table 1. Although these data have limitations which are discussed in detail in the body of the report, some clear trends are evident. First, vaccination coverage, estimated using Australian Childhood Immunisation Register (ACIR) data, reached the targets set by the Immunise Australia program, with levels of full immunisation exceeding 90 per cent and approaching 95 per cent at 12 months of age and reaching 90 per cent at 24 months of age by the end of 2003.

Second, accompanying this increase in vaccine coverage, notifications for the eight diseases covered by the routine childhood vaccination schedule (diphtheria, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) disease, measles, mumps, pertussis, polio, rubella and tetanus) continued to decline, although less sharply than in the previous review period, from an average of 8,046 cases each year in 1997–2000 to 7,806 in 2001–2002. Table 1 highlights the decrease in measles, mumps and rubella which has continued since the national Measles Control Campaign (MCC) was conducted in 1998. However, reductions in these three diseases were offset to some extent by the large number of pertussis notifications arising from the 2001 epidemic, with six deaths in 2001–2002. These pertussis deaths were almost all in very young infants and emphasise the importance of initiatives implemented in the 2003 Australian Immunisation Handbook to improve pertussis control.

Third, cases of Hib disease also continued to decline with improved vaccine coverage. Of vaccine preventable diseases not included on the childhood schedule during the review period, the greatest morbidity and mortality at all ages was from influenza (44 deaths), pneumococcal disease (15 deaths), meningococcal disease (44 deaths) and varicella (10 deaths). Deaths from meningococcal disease increased from an average of 31 and influenza decreased from an average of 117, compared with 1997–2000.

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Comment

The years 2001 and 2002 have been a period of consolidation in immunisation practice and coverage in Australia, following the implementation of the new vaccination schedule in 2000. Australia, like many other industrialised countries, faces the dual challenges of maintaining high immunisation coverage and public confidence in immunisation while implementing increasingly complex decisions about the introduction of new vaccines for children and adults.

In surveillance, improved control of vaccine preventable diseases means that laboratory confirmation, together with accurate information on the vaccination status and any underlying medical conditions, is essential to evaluate program impact. In vaccination practice, vaccination coverage targets are probably close to their highest achievable levels in children. However, improving control through vaccination of measles and pertussis in young adults and adolescents stands out as a challenge for the next few years.

Important programs across the age spectrum in influenza and pneumococcal disease have commenced or gained momentum during this review period. The impact of these and the campaign to control disease due to serogroup C meningococcal disease should be more apparent in 2003–2004. Careful evaluation of the additional benefits of new programs and continued efforts to maintain current programs will be required to sustain the success of immunisation in Australia over the first decade of the 21st Century.

Table 1. Notifications, hospitalisations and deaths from 11 diseases preventable by vaccination, Australia, 1997 to 2002*

Disease Notifications Hospitalisations Deaths
Average per year 1997–2000 Average per year 2001–2002 Average per year July 1996– June 2000 Average per year July 2000–June 2002 Average per year1997–2000 Average per year 2001–2002
Diphtheria
0
0.5
1
0.5
0
0
Hib (<5 yr)
22
12
40
30
0.5
0.5
Influenza§
NN
2,480
4,767
2,905
117
44
Measles
368
86
96
53
0
0
Meningococcal disease
547
677
741
871
31
44
Mumps
193
92
53
43
0
0.5
Pertussis
6,749
7,359
708
639
1.5
3
Pneumococcal disease
NN
2,294||
754
1,055
15
15
Polio
0
0
1.5**
1.5**
0
0
Rubella
710
256
43
27
0
0
Tetanus
6
3
35
27
1.25
0.5
Total
8,593††
8,483††
(13,257)‡‡
7,238††
5,651††
166
107.5

NN = not notifiable.

* Notifications where the month of onset was between January 1997 and December 2002; hospitalisations where the month of separation was between 1 July 1996 and 30 June 2002; deaths where the date of death was recorded between 1997 and 2002.

† See Chapter 3 for case definitions.

‡ Note that hospitalisations and deaths are for Haemophilus influenzae disease and, unlike notifications, are not limited to type b.

§ Limitations of notification systems and coding for influenza hospitalisations and deaths limit the representativeness of these data, which grossly underestimate the disease burden due to influenza.

|| Notifications only complete for 2002 – notifications for 2002 only.

¶ Queensland did not notify mumps in 2000 or for complete calendar years in 1999 or 2001.

** Principal diagnosis only.

†† Average per year for the total does not equal the sum of that for each disease, due to rounding.

‡‡ Total including influenza and pneumococcal notifications.

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