Abstract

Australian Immunisation Register data have been analysed for children aged < 5 years, focusing on changes in vaccination coverage at standard age milestones (12, 24 and 60 months) between 2018 and 2019. ‘Fully vaccinated’ coverage in 2019 increased by 0.1–0.4% at the three age milestones to 94.3% at 12 months, 90.2% at 24 months (in the context of additional antigens required at 24 months) and 94.2% at 60 months. Rotavirus vaccine coverage (2 doses) increased from 90.9% in 2018 to 91.9% in 2019. ‘Fully vaccinated’ coverage in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (hereafter respectfully referred to as Indigenous) children increased by 0.5–1.1% in 2019, reaching 92.9% at 12 months, 88.9% at 24 months and 96.9% at the 60 months (2.7 percentage points higher than in children overall). Recorded influenza vaccination coverage in children aged 6 months to < 5 years increased by 11.4 percentage points to 42.7% in Indigenous children in 2019, and by 15.6 percentage points to 41.8% in children overall. Longstanding issues with timeliness of vaccination in Indigenous children persisted, although the disparity between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children in on-time coverage (within 30 days of due date), for vaccines due at 4 months of age, decreased from 10.4–10.7 to 9.6–9.8 percentage points between 2018 and 2019. The timeliness of ‘fully vaccinated’ coverage was also examined at earlier age milestones (3 months after due date of last scheduled vaccine) of 9, 15, 21 and 51 months, by Indigenous status, socioeconomic status and remoteness of area of residence. Coverage in children living in the least-advantaged residential area quintile was 2.6–2.7% lower than that for those living in the most-advantaged quintile at the 9-, 15- and 21-month milestones, although these disparities were 0.5–1.5 percentage points lower than in 2018. Coverage at the earlier milestones in Indigenous children in remote areas was 1.5–6.7% percentage points lower than that for Indigenous children in major cities and regional areas, although there were some improvements since 2018. Importantly, although Indigenous children had lower coverage for the second dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine at 24 months (92.7% versus 93.3% overall), coverage increased to 98.8% at 60 months; coverage was also high overall at 96.4%, above the 95% target critical to measles control. In conclusion, this report demonstrates continuing improvements across a range of immunisation indicators in Australia in 2019. However, some issues with timeliness persist, particularly in Indigenous and socioeconomically disadvantaged children. New coverage targets for earlier protection in the first 2 years of life may be indicated, along with a review of current ‘fully vaccinated’ assessment algorithms, particularly at the 60-month age milestone.

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