Childhood asthma hotspots in Australia using Census 2021 data

Ecological study using data from the Census 2021 (self-reported asthma prevalence in 4,6 million aged 0-14) for spatial clustering using statistical area level 2 (SA2, a ‘suburb’ within cities and catchments of rural areas, population around 3000 to 25000) and statistical modelling. The study reported that: (ref 1)
– 6.27% overall (average) childhood asthma prevalence in these geographical areas, ranging from 0 to 16.5%
465 areas (suburbs) were hotspots (they had a prevalence above the average 6.27% and were surrounded by areas with similar prevalence) , representing 20% of all areas
NSW had the most hotspots (39%) followed by VIC (21%), QLD (18%) and TAS (11%)
– More than 60% of hotspots were in socio-economically disadvantaged areas
– Higher asthma prevalence in areas of areas of SE disadvantage vs advantage (10% higher, PR=1.10)
– Higher asthma prevalence in areas with high proportions of First Nations people (13% higher, PR=1.13)
Hotspots mostly observed in regional or remote areas of New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, and Tasmania

Concl/Discussion: Childhood asthma variation was found to be associated with area-level sociodemographic features, such as social deprivation and Indigenous density. These findings can be attributed to environmental features including socioeconomic deprivation, race or ethnicity, pollen, dust, exhaust pollutants, air pollution, violence, or crime, as well as limited access to healthcare because the majority of specialised paediatric asthma services are located in tertiary metropolitan hospitals.

Note/Limitations: ecological studies can demonstrate associations rather than causal relationships, and parent-reported data may not be reliable due to reporting bias.

The 20 hotspot areas / suburbs with the highest prevalence of childhood asthma (ref 2)
Areas Self-reported asthma prevalence among children 0-14 years
Acton – Upper Burnie (Tasmania 13.8 per cent
Mount Hutton – Windale (NSW) 12.9 per cent
East Devonport (Tasmania) 12.8 per cent
Charnwood (ACT) 12.5 per cent
Waverley – St Leonards (Tasmania) 11.8 per cent
Leeton (NSW) 11.7 per cent
Kurri Kurri – Abermain (NSW) 11.6 per cent
West Wallsend – Barnsley – Killingworth (NSW) 11.6 per cent
Ravenswood (Tasmania) 11.6 per cent
Wynyard (Tasmania) 11.6 per cent
Bathurst – South (NSW) 11.5 per cent
Wendouree – Miners Rest (Victoria) 11.5 per cent
Tinana (Queensland) 11.3 per cent
Cessnock Surrounds (NSW) 11.2 per cent
Sebastopol – Redan (Victoria) 11.2 per cent
Leichhardt – One Mile (Queensland) 11.2 per cent
West Ulverstone (Tasmania) 11.2 per cent
Dubbo – East (NSW) 11.1 per cent
Wauchope (NSW) 11.1 per cent
Bridgewater – Gagebrook (Tasmania) 11 per cent

 

23 Hotspot Regions

The hotspot suburbs with high asthma childhood prevalence were identified in 23 SA4 areas (regions/shires, mostly with a population over 100,000) listed below: (ref 1 and 3)

Note: reference 3 is a Data on File ( UNSW Asthma hotspots – Childhood-Asthma-Clusters-Data-by-suburb-SA2-with-electorates .xlsx) provided by UNSW and can’t be shared without approval from UNSW.

Jurisdiction  SA4 / regions
NSW Central Coast; Central West; Riverinera;  Hunter Valley (exc Newcastle); Newcastle and Lake Macquarie; Port Macquarie
QLD Ipswich; Moreton Bay; Logan – Beaudesert; Maryborough;
VIC Bendigo; Geelong; Hume; Shepparton; Ballarat
ACT Belconnen; Tuggeranong
TAS Launceston and North East; South East; West and North West
SA Adelaide – North; Adelaide – South; Barossa – Yorke – Mid North

Refer to attached file (Ref 3) for detail of hotspot suburbs (SA2s) included in each region (SA4).

Reproduced from Ref 4:

UNSW data – Asthma Hotspots in WA and NT (ref 5):

UNSW data on file – asthma hotspots WA – email J Khan 20 Jan 2026.pdf

UNSW team shared with AA that 4 hotspot suburbs (SA2) out of 465 were located in WA, and none were located in NT:

Statistical area level 2 (SA2, small geographic areas/neighbourhood/communities) Asthma prevalence
East Bunbury – Glen Iris 7.7
South Bunbury – Bunbury 6.5
Albany 7.3
Murray 6.4

Note that most areas in WA exhibited relatively low asthma prevalence. This pattern may reflect a combination of low population density, and the potential for underdiagnosis, particularly in remote communities.

File Type: xlsx
Categories: Children and young people, Prevalence
Entry Date: 30/07/2025
Source 1 Name: Khan JR, et al. Social deprivation and spatial clustering of childhood asthma in Australia. Glob Health Res Policy. 2024 Jun 24;9(1):22. doi: 10.1186/s41256-024-00361-2.
Source 2 Name: ABC News. Asthma ‘hotspots’ identified as new research puts spotlight on regional Australia [Internet]. Accessed 4 dec 2024.
Source 2 URL: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-11/regional-asthma-hotspots-medical-help/104309350
Source 3 Name: UNSW. Data on File.
Source 4 Name: Asthma Australia. Healthy Futures for Kids With Asthma. Asthma Australia's 2025 election priorities for better health outcomes for children with asthma.
Source 4 URL: https://asthma.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/2025-Election-Proposal-Children-and-Young-people_Final-Edits.pdf
wp_statistics_words_count: 562
Source 3 URL: see attached file.
Source 5 Name: UNSW. Data on file. Email communication from J Khan 20 Jan 2026.
Source 5 URL: https://asthmafoundation.sharepoint.com/:b:/s/RPA/IQClWr7WsXJfTIA_t0pcR2WCAaGGzQOpQgXXaoSaclglnUU?e=VFsdPv