The latest figures on child immunisation rates show there are a number of areas where rates remain too low to prevent the potential spread of diseases and most areas are falling short of the target for children to be fully immunised.
The Australian Chief Medical Officer and all state and territory chief health officers agreed to a target for 95 per cent of children to be fully immunised.
Figures released today show for one- and two-year-olds, none of the 31 primary health network areas across the country met the target, while only two areas did for five-year-olds.
Over the past two financial years, the most significant increase in immunisation rates for one-year-olds was seen in South Australia’s Outback North and East region, followed by Surfers Paradise in Queensland and Sydney’s eastern suburbs.
Immunisation rates for one-year-old Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children significantly increased in seven out of 49 areas where data was available, and decreased in none.
The lowest immunisation rate for one-year-olds was recorded in the New South Wales North Coast.
Comparing the three age groups, the percentages of all children fully immunised were higher among five-year-olds than one and two-year-olds across most regions.