Deaths due to COVID-19, influenza and RSV in Australia - 2022 - November 2024

Acute respiratory disease mortality in Australia

Released
18/12/2024

Acute respiratory infection mortality in Australia

The ABS have reported extensively on deaths involving COVID-19 during the pandemic. The ABS mortality data is sourced from the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages and is separate from the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System. While the registration-based deaths data takes longer to receive and process this dataset has provided important supplementary information to the surveillance system data. 

As the pandemic has progressed, there has been a re-emergence of other acute respiratory diseases. To reflect this, the ABS now reports on the number of monthly deaths due to COVID-19, influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). In this article, these viral diseases will be referred to collectively as deaths due to acute respiratory infections. Due to the higher number of deaths due to COVID-19 more detailed analysis will be included for this cause. 

All data presented in this article is provisional. It is expected that numbers of deaths due to these causes will increase for more recent time periods as more death registrations are received by the ABS. 

Deaths involving acute respiratory infections by month

The table below shows the number of acute respiratory associated deaths reported on a medical certificate of cause of death by month and year. An acute respiratory associated death is one where the viral disease has either directly caused the death (the virus has caused terminal complications such as pneumonia) or the person has died with the virus (a person has died from another cause but the viral illness still contributed significantly to death). 

  • COVID-19 has been the leading cause of acute respiratory infection mortality across 2022-2024. 
  • Deaths involving COVID-19 have fallen from the June peak of 857 deaths to 195 deaths in September 2024. Deaths involving COVID-19 for the first 9 months of 2024 are 12.9% lower than 2023 and 62.0% lower than 2022. 
  • Deaths involving influenza dropped from their peak in July and August (258 and 259 deaths respectively) to 72 deaths in September 2024. See the graph in the next section for additional context on influenza deaths.
  • Deaths involving RSV have been at comparable levels to those recorded in 2022 and 2023 since July.
Acute respiratory infection associated deaths, 2022-2024 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAll
2022 - COVID-191,8781,2465519331,2281,1771,8781,5836343535981,25213,311
2022 - Influenzanp00np6121988308566427
2022 - RSVnpnp0np74155553621158243
2023 - COVID-199853563885938298054342412122625135336,151
2023 - Influenza155153753951484942574538599
2023 - RSVnp711233561696736351314373
2024 - COVID-19584389342302566857610373195185104na4,507
2024 - Influenza3436294059115258259723613na951
2024 - RSV111524456785685431259na434

na - not available
np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory disease death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 November 2024.
c. All deaths involving COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9 or U09.9. All deaths involving influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths involving RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by month

The ABS codes an underlying cause of death (UCOD) for all deaths in the national mortality dataset. The underlying cause of death is defined as the disease, condition or external event that started the chain of events leading to death. International coding rules are applied to disease and conditions appearing on the medical certificate of cause of death (MCCD) to assign the UCOD. A disease or condition must be certified on the MCCD to be coded by the ABS. If COVID-19, influenza or RSV is listed as the underlying cause of death, the death is considered to have been caused by the virus. 

The following table shows the number of deaths due to acute respiratory diseases since 2022. A graph is presented below the table showing deaths due to influenza in 2024 by month compared to 2019 and 2017 which are both considered to be years that experienced more severe influenza seasons. 

  • The number of deaths from COVID-19 have been much lower in every month of 2024 than the same month in 2022. Between January and September 2024 there have been 3,293 deaths from COVID-19, 304 (8.5%) fewer than in 2023 and 5,336 (61.8%) fewer than in 2022.
  • There were 50 deaths from influenza in September 2024, down from 213 in July and 199 in August. There were relatively few influenza deaths in 2022 and 2023. To provide additional context for the larger number of deaths in 2024, data is compared to 2019 and 2017 (see graph below table). The number of deaths in July and August 2024 were comparable to those in 2019, but the influenza season in 2019 started earlier and finished later than that of 2024, so the annual number of deaths will be lower in 2024. In 2017 there were relatively few influenza deaths for the first seven months, but the peak in August and September was much higher than the peaks seen in 2019 or 2024. Between January and September, there have been 706 deaths due to influenza in 2024, compared to 981 deaths in 2019 and 1,076 deaths in 2017.
Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by month, 2022-2024 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAll
2022 - COVID-191,6471,0344247169298911,4091,13144825445697110,310
2022 - Influenzanp00np511665817npnpnp5312
2022 - RSVnp000np10141586npnp61
2023 - COVID-197532362724406366063371621552034053944,599
2023 - Influenza85112746751123631433534463
2023 - RSVnpnpnpnp814191991265101
2024 - COVID-1944028726523044867548931114813088na3,511
2024 - Influenza272619324991213199502910na745
2024 - RSVnpnp6172024191599npna128

na - not available
np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory disease death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 November 2024.
c. All deaths involving COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9 or U09.9. All deaths involving influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths involving RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths with contributing acute respiratory infections by month

The table below shows the number of acute-respiratory associated deaths where the person has died with the virus (a person has died from another cause but the viral illness still contributed significantly to death).

  • COVID-19 and Influenza are more likely to be assigned as the underlying causes of death rather than a contributing factor (i.e. a person died with the virus). The opposite is true for RSV - it is more likely to be listed as a significant contributor to death. To wholly monitor the effects of RSV on mortality, deaths with RSV should be taken into consideration. 
  • There have been more deaths with RSV in each of the first six months of 2024 than in the corresponding months of 2022 or 2023. Since July deaths with RSV have been comparable to or slightly lower than deaths recorded in 2023.
  • There have been fewer deaths with COVID-19 in each of the first nine months of 2024 than in the corresponding months of 2022 or 2023 with the exception of July, where the 121 deaths with COVID-19 in 2024 were higher than the 97 deaths in 2023 but well below the 469 deaths in 2022. 
Deaths with acute respiratory infections by month, 2022-2024 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAll
2022 - COVID-19231212127217299286469452186991422813,001
2022 - Influenzanp00010533013npnpnpnp115
2022 - RSVnpnp0np63141402815116182
2023 - COVID-19232120116153193199977957591081391,552
2023 - Influenza70np107203613111410np136
2023 - RSVnp582027475048272379272
2024 - COVID-19144102777211818212162475516na996
2024 - Influenza71010810244560227npna206
2024 - RSV81218284761493922166na306

na - not available
np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory disease death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 November 2024.
c. All deaths involving COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9 or U09.9. All deaths involving influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths involving RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by age and sex

  • More males have died from COVID-19 compared to females across 2022-2024. The reverse has been true for influenza and RSV.
  • Those aged over 90 years are the only age group to consistently record more deaths of females than males from COVID-19. Nearly two thirds of Australia's population of persons aged over 90 years are female.
  • More females (394) than males (351) have died from influenza in 2024.
  • All three of these acute respiratory infections are more likely to cause death in older age groups than younger age groups. 
Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by age and sex, 2022-2024 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 2022 - COVID-192022 - Influenza2022 - RSV2023 - COVID-192023 - Influenza2023 - RSV2024 - COVID-192024 - Influenza2024 - RSV
Male 0-1911npnpnp80npnpnp
Male 20-299np0np50np50
Male 30-3927np0550npnp0
Male 40-49545np1611np12110
Male 50-5916510np4515019160
Male 60-6942720np16935np106425
Male 70-791,27127np52057np385795
Male 80-892,2404061,019581279711817
Male 90+1,50326664433115497418
All Male5,707134232,425227301,87435146
Female 0-199npnpnp10npnp70
Female 20-2910000np0npnp0
Female 30-3916np09100npnp0
Female 40-4936701170107np
Female 50-591029np2411np23160
Female 60-6926327np11232np81310
Female 70-7967536np318519236679
Female 80-891,6354414796692158613421
Female 90+1,8574813903443369512651
All Female4,603178382,174236711,63739482

np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory infection death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 November 2024.
c. All deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9. All deaths due to influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths due to RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B34.8 with B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by state and territory of registration

  • As the most populous state, New South Wales generally records the highest numbers of deaths for acute respiratory infections. 
  • Queensland has recorded the highest number of deaths due to RSV in 2024.
  • COVID-19 has caused more deaths than influenza and RSV across 2022-2024 in all jurisdictions. 
Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by state and territory of registration, 2022-2024 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 NSWVicQldSAWATasNTACTAus
2022 - COVID-193,7362,9881,6918476402005315510,310
2022 - Influenza1057572271488np312
2022 - RSV2415115npnp0061
2023 - COVID-191,5841,19777238545612018674,599
2023 - Influenza1368312063331468463
2023 - RSV292420612np07101
2024 - COVID-191,16989861930733211314593,511
2024 - Influenza257189166484425511745
2024 - RSV36263957120np128

np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory infection death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 November 2024.
c. All deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9. All deaths due to influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths due to RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B34.8 with B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Acute respiratory disease mortality among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people

COVID-19 mortality among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people by month

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are at heightened risk of more severe outcomes from acute respiratory diseases. There are several reasons for this, including higher rates of socioeconomic disadvantage, higher rates of chronic diseases and limited access to culturally safe health care.

This section presents three tables which includes information on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who have died from acute respiratory diseases. The first two tables focus on COVID-19 mortality only due to the higher numbers of deaths from the virus. The third table presents numbers of deaths and age-standardised death rates on deaths associated with COVID-19, influenza and RSV. For most of the analysis deaths include those where the acute respiratory disease was listed on the medical certificate of cause of death. This includes deaths where the acute respiratory disease caused death and those where the acute respiratory disease contributed to death. Data is presented in this way largely due to the small numbers of deaths from these diseases in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.  

There have been deaths recorded in all jurisdictions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. However, the rest of this analysis focusses on deaths registered in New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory only. Currently, these five states and territories have evidence of a sufficient level of Indigenous identification and high enough numbers of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander deaths to support mortality analysis.

There were 70 deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people involving COVID-19 in the first ten months of 2024. This is lower than the first eight months in both 2023 (99 deaths) and 2022 (226 deaths).

Deaths from or with COVID-19 among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, 2022-24, NSW, Qld, SA, WA and NT(a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)(h)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAll
202226431924211821321481024260
2023239np1116131165np511115
20241169610995npnp0na70

na - not available
np - not published
a. Doctor certified and coroner certified deaths are included.
b. Data is by date of occurrence.
c. Data is provisional and subject to change.
d. Died from COVID-19 - where the underlying cause of death is COVID-19. Died with COVID-19 - COVID-19 is a contributory cause of death but not the underlying cause.
e. Includes deaths that occurred from January 2022 that were registered by 30 November 2024.
f. Data is sourced from the death registration system and differs from COVID-19 data collected through the surveillance system.
g. Deaths in remote Australia can take longer to register with a jurisdictional RBDM as funerals may take longer to occur. This delay in registration may cause a delay in the death registration being sent to the ABS.
h. Data are reported by jurisdiction of state of registration for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT only. Data for Victoria, Tasmania and the ACT have been excluded as data quality of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification is not considered to be as robust for these jurisdictions.

COVID-19 mortality among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people: Age-standardised death rates

There were 445 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who had COVID-19 certified as a cause of death across the five jurisdictions. Of these people:

  • 286 died due to COVID-19. This is where the virus caused complications that led directly to death. A further 159 people died with COVID-19. This is where another disease caused the terminal complication causing death but COVID-19 was a contributing factor.
  • The age-standardised death rate for deaths from COVID-19 is comparable for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander males and females. For deaths with COVID-19, the age standardised death rate for males is higher than for females. For non-indigenous people, males have a higher age-standardised death rate than females for both deaths from COVID-19 and with COVID-19.
  • Of those who died from or with COVID-19, a higher proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people died with COVID-19 as a contributing factor compared with non-Indigenous people (35.7% compared with 25.5%).
  • The mortality rate from COVID-19 is 1.5 times higher in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people compared to non-Indigenous people.
  • For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females, the rate of mortality with COVID-19 is 2.3 times higher than that of non-Indigenous females.
Number, proportions and age-standardised death rates of COVID-19 deaths in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, 2022-2024, NSW, Qld, SA, WA and NT(a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)(h)(i)
 Number of deathsProportion of deaths (%)Age-standardised death rates  
 IndigenousNon-IndigenousIndigenousNon-IndigenousIndigenousNon-IndigenousRate differenceRate ratio
Died from COVID 
Males1326,78562.074.725.920.25.71.3
Females1545,53566.474.425.814.011.81.8
Persons28612,32064.374.525.916.99.01.5
Died with COVID 
Males812,29938.025.312.26.95.31.8
Females781,90933.625.611.54.96.52.3
Persons1594,20835.725.511.95.96.02.0
Died from or with COVID 
Males2139,08410010038.127.211.01.4
Females2327,44410010037.319.018.32.0
Persons44516,52810010037.822.815.01.7

a. Doctor certified and coroner certified deaths are included.
b. Data is by date of occurrence.
c. Data is provisional and subject to change.
d. Died from COVID-19 - where the underlying cause of death is COVID-19. Died with COVID-19 - COVID-19 is a contributory cause of death but not the underlying cause.
e. Includes deaths that occurred from January 2022 that were registered by 30 November 2024.
f. Data is sourced from the death registration system and differs from COVID-19 data collected through the surveillance system.
g. Deaths in remote Australia can take longer to register with a jurisdictional RBDM as funerals may take longer to occur. This delay in registration may cause a delay in the death registration being sent to the ABS.
h. Data are reported by jurisdiction of state of registration for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT only. Data for Victoria, Tasmania and the ACT have been excluded as data quality of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification is not considered to be as robust for these jurisdictions.

Deaths due to COVID-19, influenza and RSV

For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who died by an acute respiratory disease: 

  • COVID-19 caused more deaths than both influenza and RSV across each year in 2022-2024. 
  • The mortality rate for COVID-19 and influenza related mortality for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was higher than non-Indigenous people across each year in 2022-2024. 
  • The mortality rate for influenza related mortality is higher in both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and non-Indigenous people in 2024 compared to 2022 and 2023. 
Number and age-standardised death rates of acute respiratory infection associated deaths in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, 2022-2024, NSW, Qld, SA, WA and NT(a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)(h)(i)
 COVID-19InfluenzaRSV
 202220232024202220232024202220232024
Indigenous deaths260115702735368np9
Non-Indigenous deaths9,0204,3533,155293436648160268304
Indigenous age-standardised death rate66.228.817.36.16.57.4npnpnp
Non-Indigenous age-standardised death rate37.717.412.11.31.92.60.71.11.2

np - not published
a. Doctor certified and coroner certified deaths are included.
b. Data is by date of occurrence.
c. Data is provisional and subject to change.
d. Died from COVID-19 - where the underlying cause of death is COVID-19. Died with COVID-19 - COVID-19 is a contributory cause of death but not the underlying cause.
e. Includes deaths that occurred from January 2022 that were registered by 30 November 2024.
f. Data is sourced from the death registration system and differs from COVID-19 data collected through the surveillance system.
g. Deaths in remote Australia can take longer to register with a jurisdictional RBDM as funerals may take longer to occur. This delay in registration may cause a delay in the death registration being sent to the ABS.
h. Data are reported by jurisdiction of state of registration for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT only. Data for Victoria, Tasmania and the ACT have been excluded as data quality of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification is not considered to be as robust for these jurisdictions.

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