Comparisons of the effects of diseases and the side effects of vaccines

Immunisation providers are encouraged to use this tool to help parents make an informed decision regarding their child’s immunisation.

This table provides comparisons between the effects of diseases and the side effects of vaccines, based on information from the Australian Immunisation Handbook, 9th Edition 2013 (external site).

Disease Effect of disease Side effect of vaccine

Diphtheria

  • Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
  • Causes severe throat and breathing difficulties.
  • Up to 1 in 7 patients die.
  • Bacteria releases a toxin which can produce nerve paralysis and heart failure.
  • About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site (DTPa/dTpa vaccine).
  • Fever (DTPa/dTpa vaccine).
  • Booster doses of DTPa may occasionally be associated with extensive swelling of the limb, but this resolves completely within a few days.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Hepatitis A

  • Virus spread by contact or ingestion of faecally contaminated water/food or through contact with faecal material of a person infected with hepatitis A.

At least 7 in 10 adult patients develop:

  • jaundice (yellowing of skin and eyes)
  • fever
  • anorexia (decreased appetite)
  • nausea
  • vomiting
  • hepatic (liver) pain
  • malaise (tiredness).
  • About 1 in 5 will have local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Hepatitis B

  • Virus spread mainly by blood, sexual contact or from mother to newborn baby.
  • Causes acute hepatitis (liver infection) or chronic infection (‘carrier’).
  • About 1 in 4 chronic carriers will develop cirrhosis or liver cancer.
  • About 1 in 20 will have local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
  • 2 in 100 will have fever.
  • Anaphylaxis occurs in about 1 in 1 million.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Hib

  • Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.

Hib can cause:

  • meningitis (infection of the tissues surround the brain)
  • epiglottitis (respiratory obstruction)
  • septicaemia (infection of the blood stream)
  • septic arthritis (infection in the joints).
  • About 1 in 20 meningitis patients die, and about 1 in 4 survivors has permanent brain damage.
  • Epiglottitis is rapidly and invariably fatal without treatment.
  • About 1 in 20 will have local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
  • About 1 in 50 has fever.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Human papillomavirus

  • Virus spread mainly through sexual contant.
  • Up to 80% of the population will be infected with HPV at some time in their lives.
Some HPV types are associated with development of cancer.
  • About 7 in 10 cervical cancers (worldwide) have been associated with HPV-16.
  • About 1 in 6 cervical cancers (worldwide) have been associated with HPV-18.
  • About 8 in 10 people will have pain at injection site.
  • About 2 in 10 will will have local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
  • Up to 3 in 10 people may experience:
    • headaches
    • fever
    • muscle aches
    • tiredness.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Influenza

  • Virus spread by respiratory droplets.
  • About 1 in 10 to 1 in 5 people will get influenza every year.
  • Influenza causes:
    • fever
    • muscle and joint pains
    • pneumonia.
  • Influenza causes an estimated 3000 deaths in people older than 50 years of age each year in Australia.
  • Causes increased hospitalisation in the very young (under 5 and the elderly.
  • Other high risk groups include:
    • pregnant women
    • people who are obese
    • diabetics
    • others with certain chronic medical conditions.
  • About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
  • Fever occurs in about 1 in 10 children aged 6 months to 3 years.
  • Guillain-Barré syndrome occurs in about 1 in 1 million.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Measles

  • Highly infectious virus spread by respiratory droplets.
  • Causes fever, cough and rash.
  • About 1 in 15 children with measles develops pneumonia and 1 in 1000 develops encephalitis (brain inflammation).
  • For every 10 children who develop measles encephalitis, 1 dies and many have permanent brain damage.
  • About 1 in 100 000 develops SSPE (brain degeneration), which is always fatal.
  • About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
  • About 1 in 20 develops a rash, which is non-infectious.
  • Low platelet count (causing bruising or bleeding) occurs after the first dose of MMR vaccine at a rate of about 1 in 20 000 to 30 000.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Meningococcal infection

  • Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
  • Causes septicaemia (infection of the blood stream) and meningitis (infection of the tissues surrounding the brain).
  • About 1 in 10 patients dies. Of those that survive, 1 to 2 in 10 have permanent long-term problems, such as loss of limbs and brain damage.
  • About 1 in 10 has:
    • local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site
    • fever
    • irritability
    • loss of appetite
    • headaches (conjugate vaccines).
  • About 1 in 2 has a local reaction (polysaccharide vaccine).
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Mumps

  • Virus spread by saliva.
  • Causes swollen neck and salivary glands, and fever.
  • 1 in 5000 children develops encephalitis (brain inflammation).
  • 1 in 5 males (adolescent/adult) develop inflammation of the testes.
  • Occasionally, mumps causes infertility or permanent deafness.
  • About 1 in 100 may develop swelling of the salivary glands.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Pertussis

  • Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
  • Causes ‘whooping cough’, with prolonged cough lasting up to 3 months.
  • About 1 in 125 babies under the age of 6 months with whooping cough dies from pneumonia or brain damage.
  • About 1 in 10 has:
    • local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site
    • fever (DTPa/dTpa vaccine).
  • Booster doses of DTPa may occasionally be associated with extensive swelling of the limb, but this resolves completely within a few days.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare

Pneumococcal infection

  • Bacteria spread by respiratory droplets.
  • Causes:
    • septicaemia (infection of the blood stream)
    • meningitis (infection of the tissues surrounding the brain)
    • occasionally other infections.
  • About 3 in 10 people with meningitis die.
  • One-third of all pneumonia cases and up to half of pneumonia hospitalisations in adults is caused by pneumococcal infection.
  • About 1 in 5 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site or fever (conjugate vaccine).
  • Up to 1 in 2 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site (polysaccharide vaccine).
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Polio

  • Virus spread in faeces and saliva
  • Causes:
    • fever
    • headache
    • vomiting
    • may progress to paralysis.
  • While many infections cause no symptoms, up to 3 in 10 patients with paralytic polio die, and many patients who survive are permanently paralysed.
  • Local redness, pain and swelling at the injection site are common.
  • Up to 1 in 10 has fever, crying and decreased appetite.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Rotavirus

  • Virus spread by faecal–oral route.
  • Causes gastroenteritis, which can be severe.
  • Illness may range from mild diarrhoea to severe dehydrating diarrhoea and fever, which can result in death.
  • Before the vaccine was introduced:
    • 10 000 children were hospitalised each year
    • 115 000 needed GP visits each year
    • 22 000 required an emergency department visit each year.
  • Up to 3 in 100 may develop diarrhoea or vomiting in the week after receiving the vaccine.
  • About 1 in 17 000 babies may develop intussusception in the first few weeks after the first or second vaccine doses.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Rubella

  • Virus spread by respiratory droplets.
  • causes fever, rash and swollen glands, but causes severe malformations in babies of infected pregnant women.
  • Patients typically develop a rash, painful swollen glands and painful joints.
  • 1 in 3000 develops low platelet count (causing bruising or bleeding)
  • 1 in 6000 develops encephalitis (brain inflammation).
  • Up to 9 in 10 babies infected during the first trimester of pregnancy will have a major congenital abnormality (including deafness, blindness or heart defects)
  • About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site.
  • About 1 in 20 has swollen glands, stiff neck or joint pains.
  • About 1 in 20 has a rash, which is non-infectious.
  • Low platelet count (causing bruising or bleeding) occurs after the1st dose of MMR vaccine, at a rate of about 1 in 20 000 to 30 000.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Tetanus

  • Caused by toxin of bacteria in soil.
  • Causes painful muscle spasms, convulsions, lockjaw.
  • About 2 in 100 patients die.
  • The risk is greatest for the very young or old.
  • About 1 in 10 has local swelling, redness or pain at the injection site, or fever (DTPa/dTpa vaccine).
  • Booster doses of DTPa may occasionally be associated with extensive swelling of the limb, but this resolves completely within a few days.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.

Varicella

  • Highly contagious virus.
  • Causes low-grade fever and vesicular rash (fluid-filled spots).
  • Reactivation of the virus later in life causes herpes zoster (shingles).
  • One in 100 000 patients develops encephalitis (brain inflammation).
  • Infection during pregnancy can result in congenital malformations in the baby.
  • Infection in the mother around delivery time results in severe infection in the newborn baby in up to one-third of cases.
  • About 1 in 5 has a local reaction or fever.
  • About 3 to 5 in 100 may develop a mild varicella-like rash.
  • Serious adverse events are very rare.
Acknowledgement: From the Australian Immunisation Handbook 10th edition.
Last reviewed: 17-08-2021