Declining Vaccination Rates Spur Concerns Over Rising Preventable Disease Risks in Australia

April 1, 2026
Declining Vaccination Rates Spur Concerns Over Rising Preventable Disease Risks in Australia
  • Overall HPV uptake among teenagers is declining, raising concerns about future protection against cervical, oral, and anal cancers.

  • Experts stress the importance of basing guidance on robust scientific information and separating misinformation from evidence-based vaccine advice.

  • Personal stories, such as Naomi Steenson recalling her son Blake’s death from whooping cough, illustrate the human impact of under-vaccination and the ongoing push for higher uptake.

  • New South Wales is seeing the highest measles activity since 2019, with 37 cases this year, mostly in the Sydney region.

  • Continued annual declines in vaccination rates since 2020 increase the risk of preventable diseases and potential deaths, according to the NCIRS director.

  • At least 80,000 children under five are not fully protected, coinciding with a major rise in pertussis and a tripling of measles cases from the previous year.

  • Two infant deaths from whooping cough have occurred recently, underscoring the lethal consequences of reduced vaccination.

  • The federal government has launched the National Immunisation Strategy and is investing $600 million to fund 31 vaccines across 18 diseases, though rapid implementation and resources are still needed.

  • Health Minister Mark Butler highlighted the funding for vaccines through the National Immunisation Program to safeguard children and communities.

  • Public health experts caution that ongoing declines threaten progress toward eliminating certain vaccine-preventable diseases and could lift mortality from illnesses like whooping cough.

  • Vaccination rates for HPV among adolescents have fallen, with 2025 coverage at about 78.7% for girls and 75.6% for boys, and even lower rates among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander teens.

  • The fully vaccinated rate for one-year-olds dropped to 90.5% in 2025, with declines also seen among two- and five-year-olds, continuing a multi-year downward trend.

Summary based on 3 sources


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Sources

‘More deaths’: Jab rate hits 12-year low

news.com.au — Australia’s leading news site for latest headlines • Apr 1, 2026

‘More deaths’: Jab rate hits 12-year low


These diseases are on the rise. 80,000 children are unprotected

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