Back

Disruption and recovery of notifiable infectious diseases after COVID-19 in Australia, 2015-2025

Farquhar, H. L.

2026-02-17 public and global health
10.64898/2026.02.13.26346301 medRxiv
Show abstract

BackgroundCOVID-19 non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) disrupted transmission of many infectious diseases worldwide. While disruption patterns are well-documented, systematic analysis of post-pandemic recovery trajectories across diverse pathogens remains limited. We examined disruption and recovery of 47 nationally notifiable diseases in Australia from 2015 to 2025. MethodsWe analysed NNDSS surveillance data for 47 diseases across six transmission modes, quantifying disruption using observed-to-expected (O/E) ratios against 2015-2019 baselines. We applied difference-in-differences (DiD) to estimate causal NPI effects, Kaplan-Meier survival analysis for time-to-recovery, and bootstrap 95% confidence intervals for cumulative immunity debt. ResultsDuring 2020-2021, 28 diseases decreased (median O/E 0.51), with border-sensitive and vaccine-preventable diseases most affected. DiD analysis estimated that border closures were associated with significantly greater suppression among import-dependent diseases (coefficient -0.50, 95% CI -0.90 to -0.10, p=0.016). By 2025, recovery was heterogeneous: 17 diseases exceeded baseline levels, 12 returned to expected levels, 15 remained below baseline (9 partially recovered, 6 in sustained suppression), and 3 had insufficient data for trajectory classification. Five diseases showed suppression-then-overshoot trajectories suggestive of immunity debt, though bootstrap 95% confidence intervals confirmed statistically significant cumulative excess for only one (rotavirus); for influenza, high baseline variability precluded statistical confirmation despite a large absolute overshoot. ConclusionsPost-pandemic disease recovery in Australia is heterogeneous and incomplete. Fifteen of 47 diseases have not returned to baseline levels by 2025, while 17 exhibit overshoot. These findings argue for differentiated surveillance of still-suppressed diseases and targeted catch-up vaccination in pandemic birth cohorts. Article summaryWe analysed disruption and recovery of 47 nationally notifiable diseases in Australia from 2015 to 2025, finding that 15 diseases remain below pre-pandemic levels three years after NPI relaxation. Border closures caused disproportionate suppression of import-dependent diseases, and recovery trajectories varied by disease characteristics, with immunity debt statistically confirmed for only one of five candidate diseases.

Matching journals

The top 4 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.

1
BMC Medicine
163 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
28.0%
2
Nature Communications
4913 papers in training set
Top 17%
10.2%
3
Vaccine
189 papers in training set
Top 0.5%
6.9%
4
The Lancet Public Health
20 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
6.4%
50% of probability mass above
5
Clinical Infectious Diseases
231 papers in training set
Top 1%
3.6%
6
The Lancet Regional Health - Western Pacific
15 papers in training set
Top 0.1%
3.6%
7
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
182 papers in training set
Top 1%
2.8%
8
Journal of Infection
71 papers in training set
Top 0.7%
2.6%
9
The Lancet
16 papers in training set
Top 0.2%
2.1%
10
The Lancet Infectious Diseases
71 papers in training set
Top 1%
1.9%
11
PLOS Medicine
98 papers in training set
Top 2%
1.9%
12
BMJ Open
554 papers in training set
Top 9%
1.7%
13
PLOS ONE
4510 papers in training set
Top 53%
1.7%
14
eLife
5422 papers in training set
Top 45%
1.5%
15
The Lancet Global Health
24 papers in training set
Top 0.7%
1.3%
16
BMC Infectious Diseases
118 papers in training set
Top 3%
1.3%
17
BMC Public Health
147 papers in training set
Top 4%
1.2%
18
Wellcome Open Research
57 papers in training set
Top 1%
1.2%
19
International Journal of Infectious Diseases
126 papers in training set
Top 3%
0.9%
20
Eurosurveillance
80 papers in training set
Top 1%
0.8%
21
PLOS Global Public Health
293 papers in training set
Top 5%
0.8%
22
eClinicalMedicine
55 papers in training set
Top 2%
0.8%
23
The Lancet Digital Health
25 papers in training set
Top 1%
0.8%
24
Public Health
34 papers in training set
Top 2%
0.7%
25
Journal of Public Health
23 papers in training set
Top 1%
0.7%
26
Scientific Reports
3102 papers in training set
Top 78%
0.7%
27
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
378 papers in training set
Top 6%
0.7%
28
JAMA Network Open
127 papers in training set
Top 5%
0.7%
29
The Lancet Regional Health - Europe
32 papers in training set
Top 0.5%
0.7%
30
Epidemics
104 papers in training set
Top 2%
0.5%