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Australia’s leading hepatitis experts reaffirm support for birth-dose hepatitis B vaccination

Hepatitis Australia and ASHM 6 mins read

Australia’s foremost hepatitis researchers and clinicians have released a joint expert statement confirming that Australia’s recommendation remains unchanged: all medically stable newborns who meet the weight threshold should receive their first dose of the hepatitis B vaccine within 24 hours of birth.

The statement follows international attention after a U.S. advisory panel recommended reversing its long-standing advice that infants receive the hepatitis B vaccine at birth.

Hepatitis Australia CEO Lucy Clynes said parents and healthcare professionals should remain confident in Australia’s long-standing, evidence-based approach.

“Australia’s advice has not changed. The hepatitis B birth-dose vaccination is safe, effective and one of the most important steps we can take to protect newborns from a virus that can cause lifelong liver damage and even fatal liver cancer.

“Our clinical experts are united. The evidence is clear. This vaccine saves lives, and Australia’s program continues to be one of the best in the world.”

Ms Clynes said the expert statement reinforces decades of data demonstrating the vaccine’s safety and impact.

“Babies tolerate the birth dose very well, and protection begins immediately. Thanks to routine vaccination, hepatitis B cases among young Australians have fallen by a staggering 60 per cent.

“This is prevention at its best, and it is critical that new parents receive clear, evidence-based advice from their healthcare professionals.”

Professor Jane Davies, Chair of Hepatitis Australia’s Research and Clinical Advisory Group, said Australia’s hepatitis organisations and physicians wanted to convey a critically important message to parents. 

“Australia’s leading hepatitis researchers and physicians have come together to deliver one clear message for parents.

“The hepatitis B birth-dose is safe, effective and essential for protecting newborns from infection that can have devastating life-long consequences.  

“Our statement reflects the strongest possible consensus across our hepatitis clinical and research community.”

ASHM CEO Alexis Apostolellis said the statement reflects the strong consensus across Australia’s infectious disease and clinical communities.

“Australia’s hepatitis B vaccination program is one of our outstanding public health achievements. The birth dose remains a cornerstone of protecting infants from chronic hepatitis B and the devastating consequences it can cause later in life.

“Our clinicians see the benefits of this vaccine every day. Parents should feel reassured that Australia’s guidance remains firmly grounded in evidence and expert consensus.”

The expert statement notes that hepatitis B can be passed from mother to child during birth, and without vaccination, around 90 per cent of exposed babies will develop chronic infection.

Australia’s four-dose schedule, beginning within 24 hours of birth, remains a core pillar of national public health guidance.

The statement is endorsed by leading clinicians, researchers and hepatitis organisations across Australia and reaffirms the strong consensus underpinning local vaccination policy.

Statement on behalf of leading Australian hepatitis researchers and clinicians

Birth-dose hepatitis B vaccinations: Safe, effective, and necessary

11 December 2025

·       Birth-dose hepatitis B vaccination is recommended and provided for free under Australia’s National Immunisation Program. Continued commitment to hepatitis B vaccination ensures Australia remains a global leader in preventing hepatitis B transmission and protecting future generations.

·       The hepatitis B birth-dose is safe and effective. Healthcare professionals should continue to provide new parents with clear, evidence-based advice on broad community vaccination against hepatitis B for babies born in Australia.

·       New parents should continue to have confidence in the safety and effectiveness of the hepatitis B birth-dose vaccination. Infant immunisation against hepatitis B gives children lifelong protection against a serious and preventable disease.

About hepatitis B

Hepatitis B is a serious viral infection that can cause acute illness and, in many cases, chronic disease. Chronic hepatitis B can cause liver damage and liver cancer. These are conditions that can be fatal and hepatitis B causes more liver cancer globally than any other condition.

For newborns exposed to hepatitis B, the risk of developing chronic infection is very high at around 90%. Any delay in vaccination creates unacceptable and avoidable risks.

The hepatitis B vaccine is safe, effective and necessary

Since 2000, the hepatitis B birth-dose vaccine has been recommended and provided for free under Australia’s National Immunisation Program. The current schedule recommends four doses before six months of age, with the first dose ideally administered within 24 hours of birth, once the baby is medically stable.

This birth-dose is safe, well-tolerated, and provides long-lasting protection.

This program is making a significant difference:

  • 93% of one-year-olds in Australia are now immunised against hepatitis B (as of June 2025).
  • Childhood vaccination has contributed to a 60% decline in hepatitis B notifications among Australians under 20 between 2014 and 2023.
  • In many countries, infant vaccination against hepatitis B is will drastically reduce liver cancer deaths in coming decades.

Australia is making strong progress toward eliminating hepatitis B transmission, particularly among children and young adults who have been vaccinated. To maintain this momentum, it is vital that all healthcare professionals continue to follow evidence-based clinical guidance in recommending hepatitis B vaccination for all newborns.

For further information or support, consumers and healthcare providers can contact HepLink on 1800 437 222 or at https://www.heplink.au/

HepLink is Australia’s national hepatitis information and referral service, funded by the Australian Government. You do not need a Medicare card to use HepLink.

For the latest hepatitis B immunisation schedule, including state and territory-specific guidance, please refer to the National Immunisation Program Schedule. Additional evidence-based resources are available via ASHM’s B Positive portal: https://hepatitisb.org.au/primary-prevention-of-hepatitis-b-virus-infection/

This statement is supported by leading Australian hepatitis researchers and clinicians

Professor Jane Davies
Menzies School of Health Research
Chair, Hepatitis Australia’s Research and Clinical Advisory Group

Professor Joe Doyle
Burnet Institute
President, Hepatitis Australia

Adam Gregson
Hepatology Nurse Practitioner at Royal Perth Hospital and clinical lead for the Hep B Hub WA. Member, Hepatitis Australia’s Research and Clinical Advisory Group

Professor Benjamin Cowie
Director, WHO Collaborating Centre for Viral Hepatitis, Doherty Institute, Melbourne
Board Member, ASHM Health

Professor Gregory Dore
Head, Viral Hepatitis Clinical Research Program, Kirby Institute, UNSW Sydney

Dr Skye McGregor
Group Lead, Surveillance Innovation Group, Kirby Institute, UNSW Sydney

Associate Professor Jessica Howell
Head, Hepatitis B and Liver Cancer Program, Burnet Institute, Melbourne

Associate Professor Thomas Tu
Head, Viral Hepatitis Pathogenesis Group, Westmead Institute for Medical Research
President of Australian Centre for Hepatitis Virology
Cofounder, Director, and Deputy Chair, Hep B Voices Australia
Founder and Executive Director, HepBcommunity.org

Associate Professor David Carter
Head, Health+Law Research Partnership, Faculty of Law & Justice, UNSW Sydney

Professor Peter Revill
Head of Regional and Global Health, Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, Royal Melbourne Hospital at the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity

Dr Michael Levy AM
Public Health Physician
Board Member Hepatitis Australia

Dr Jack Wallace
Burnet Institute, Melbourne

Dr Kelly Hoskins

Co-Deputy Director Viral Hepatitis Programs

Menzies School of Health Research

Emeritus Professor Andrew Lloyd AM, FAHMS

Chair, National Prisons Hepatitis Network, Viral Immunology Systems Programs, Kirby Institute, UNSW Sydney

Professor Alex Thompson
St Vincent’s Hospital Melbourne
The University of Melbourne
President, Gastroenterological Society of Australia

Professor Kate Seear
Australian Research Council Future Fellow, Deakin Law School, Deakin University

 

Dr Jacqui Richmond
Burnet Institute, Melbourne.
Board Member, ASHM Health
Board Member, Hepatitis QLD

Sally Castle
CEO, Liver Foundation

Professor Jason Grebely
Deputy Program Head, Viral Hepatitis Clinical Research Program, Kirby Institute, UNSW Sydney

 

Dr Sushena Krishnaswamy

Chair, Viral Hepatitis and HIV Special Interest Group, Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases

Professor Tony Cunningham AO FAHMS
Director, Australian Centre for HIV and Hepatitis Virology Research (ACH4)
Director, Centre for Virus Research, The Westmead Institute for Medical Research

Professor, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney
Vaccine theme leader, Sydney Institute for Infectious Diseases (SydneyID)

Reena D’Souza
Project Manager, Infectious Disease Implementation Research, The Kids Research Institute Australia
Sydney School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney

Dr Emma Paige
Deputy Chair, Viral Hepatitis and HIV Special Interest Group, Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This statement is endorsed by members and community sector partners:

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Contact details:

Media contact

Darren Rodrigo

Hepatitis Australia

Darren [email protected]
0414 783 405

Joseph McMahon

ASHM 

Senior Marketing and Communications Manager,

[email protected]

0422 232 277

 

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