Title
COVID-19 and influenza deaths in Australian children 2018-2023: a national case analysis.
Author(s)
McRae, Jocelynne
Huang, Yuanfei Anny
Baik, Mehyar Khair
Wood, Nicholas
Hassall, Jenna
Tsang, Tracy
Carr, Jeremy
Clark, Julia E
Crawford, Nigel
Marshall, Helen
McMullan, Brendan
Carey, Emma
Cheng, Allen
Blyth, Christopher
Macartney, Kristine
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Understanding COVID-19 and influenza severity in children is essential to inform future public health strategies, including vaccination. We aimed to estimate and compare mortality rates attributable to COVID-19 and influenza in the Australian pediatric population.
METHODS: A case series of children aged <18 years hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 or influenza and recorded as deceased. COVID-19 cases were ascertained January 2020 - September 2023 and influenza, seasonally, from 2018 - September 2023 at eight sentinel children's hospitals in Australia. Cases were assessed by an expert panel to determine the causal attributability of each virus to death, and those with primary or contributory causal attribution used to calculate an attributable proportion. Population mortality rates were calculated using all deaths notified to Australia's National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS). Adjusted mortality rates were estimated using the sample attributable proportions.
RESULTS: In children who died with SARS-CoV-2 or influenza infection, attributable in-hospital mortality proportions were 11/19 (58%) and 23/29 (79%) respectively. Among COVID-19 and influenza attributable deaths, 47% (16/34) had no known pre-existing co-morbidity. The respective crude and adjusted attributable average annualized mortality rates per million population were 1.35 and 0.78 (plausible range: 0.51-1.13) for COVID-19, and 1.34 and 1.06 (0.73-1.15) for influenza.
CONCLUSIONS: In Australia, crude mortality estimates of COVID-19 and influenza in children may include deaths not attributable to the viruses and so overestimate severity. Accurate age-specific attributable mortality rates and their association with medical co-morbidity is important to informing vaccination policies and other public health measures for prevention of high burden respiratory viruses in children.
METHODS: A case series of children aged <18 years hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 or influenza and recorded as deceased. COVID-19 cases were ascertained January 2020 - September 2023 and influenza, seasonally, from 2018 - September 2023 at eight sentinel children's hospitals in Australia. Cases were assessed by an expert panel to determine the causal attributability of each virus to death, and those with primary or contributory causal attribution used to calculate an attributable proportion. Population mortality rates were calculated using all deaths notified to Australia's National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS). Adjusted mortality rates were estimated using the sample attributable proportions.
RESULTS: In children who died with SARS-CoV-2 or influenza infection, attributable in-hospital mortality proportions were 11/19 (58%) and 23/29 (79%) respectively. Among COVID-19 and influenza attributable deaths, 47% (16/34) had no known pre-existing co-morbidity. The respective crude and adjusted attributable average annualized mortality rates per million population were 1.35 and 0.78 (plausible range: 0.51-1.13) for COVID-19, and 1.34 and 1.06 (0.73-1.15) for influenza.
CONCLUSIONS: In Australia, crude mortality estimates of COVID-19 and influenza in children may include deaths not attributable to the viruses and so overestimate severity. Accurate age-specific attributable mortality rates and their association with medical co-morbidity is important to informing vaccination policies and other public health measures for prevention of high burden respiratory viruses in children.
Publication information
J Pediatric Infect Dis Soc . 2025 Nov 4:piaf099. doi: 10.1093/jpids/piaf099. Online ahead of print.
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COVID-19 and influenza deaths in Australian children.pdf
Description
Re-used under a Creative Commons Attribution License: https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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581.22 KB
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Checksum
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Date Issued
2025-11-04
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society
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