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The MMR for you and the MMRV for your baby

Since vaccinations were introduced in the UK, diseases like smallpox, polio and tetanus that used to kill or disable millions of people are now very rare or gone completely. Other diseases like measles and diphtheria had been reduced by up to 99.9% since vaccines were introduced. If people stop being vaccinated against these diseases, they can spread again very quickly.

Cases of measles and mumps are being seen more commonly again now that fewer people are taking up the MMR and MMRV vaccine, which is worrying because measles can kill.

MMRV has replaced the MMR vaccine in the NHS vaccination schedule for younger children. The new vaccine protects against measles, mumps, rubella and chickenpox (varicella). Read more information about the vaccine here.

The MMR vaccine is still available for older children and adults born on or before 31 December 2019 who were not vaccinated against measles, mumps and rubella when they were younger.

Useful links

Page last reviewed: 24-10-2023

Next review due: 24-10-2026