Need Mississippi immunization records for school registration, daycare, college, a healthcare job, travel, immigration paperwork, COVID-19 proof, camp, sports, military records, or your family file? Mississippi’s public online route is MyIR, and the state registry behind many records is MIIX, the Mississippi Immunization Information Exchange. This guide explains how to find, download, print, correct, and troubleshoot your Mississippi vaccine record without using risky third-party lookup sites.
To get Mississippi immunization records online, start with the official Mississippi State Department of Health MyIR page. Register with MyIR Mobile, choose Mississippi, use “Find My Records,” enter the required personal information, and check the Documents section if your account matches a registry record. When available, MyIR can show immunization history and let parents print a certified Form 121 for school registration.
Official route: MSDH MyIR immunization records • MyIR access: MyIR MobileIf MyIR does not find the record, do not assume the person was never vaccinated. The record may be under different details, stored by a doctor, county health department, pharmacy, school, college, military clinic, previous state registry, or may need MSDH Immunizations Office help for correction.
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What Are MyIR and MIIX for Mississippi Immunization Records?
MyIR is the public-facing online service linked by the Mississippi State Department of Health for viewing immunization records that MSDH maintains, including children’s records. MSDH says MyIR can help users check recommended or required vaccines, print a certified Form 121 when a child is up to date, and print or save Mississippi COVID-19 Certificates of Vaccination.
Official source: MSDH MyIR records pageMIIX means Mississippi Immunization Information Exchange. CDC identifies Mississippi’s IIS as MIIX and says it includes immunization records for vaccine recipients of all ages. That helps adults too, but online access still depends on whether the record exists, was reported, and matches your identity details.
Federal source: CDC Mississippi IIS policy pageUse MyIR first for children’s records and Form 121. If no match appears, try MSDH help, the child’s doctor, school, or county health department.
Open MyIR MobileUse MyIR, provider records, pharmacy apps, college health offices, military records, previous state registries, and MSDH support.
Open MSDH immunizationsMississippi school and daycare entry often centers on Form 121 or an exemption record, not just a casual vaccine screenshot.
Open Form 121 guidanceHow to Get Mississippi Immunization Records Online Step by Step
Use this order when you need a Mississippi shot record quickly and safely. It starts with the official online route, then moves through backup sources that can actually help when MyIR cannot match your record.
- Open the official MSDH MyIR page. Start from the Mississippi State Department of Health MyIR page, then register or sign in through MyIR Mobile. Avoid paid “instant vaccine record” websites.
- Create or sign in to a MyIR account. MyIR instructions say to choose Register, select Mississippi, enter your name and email, create a password, and verify the account by phone or email.
- Choose “Find My Records.” This is the key lookup step. Enter the required personal details exactly so the system can try to match your immunization record.
- Open the matched account if MyIR finds you. If your information matches a Mississippi registry entry, MyIR may show immunization records, immunization needs, and documents.
- Check the Documents section. MSDH says once your account is located, check Documents for an immunization history or Form 121 to download or print.
- Use the green MyIR chat bubble if no match appears. MSDH says the chat option can collect extra details to help locate your record when your information does not exactly match.
- Call MSDH or check the original record holder. If MyIR still fails, contact MSDH Immunizations Office, your doctor, county health department, school, pharmacy, college, military clinic, or prior state registry.
Where Should You Look First?
Use this quick tool to choose the most practical first route. It does not collect, store, or send personal information.
How to Download, Print or Save Mississippi Immunization Records
MyIR is the main online route when your Mississippi record is available and your information matches. MSDH says users can check the Documents section for an immunization history or Form 121 to download or print after the account is located.
Official instructions: MSDH MyIR instructions| Download issue | What it usually means | Practical fix |
|---|---|---|
| No MyIR match | Your name, birth date, phone, email, guardian details, or registry data may not line up. | Use exact legal details, old phone/email if relevant, then use the MyIR green chat bubble. |
| Form 121 missing | The child may not be matched, may not be up to date, or the document may not be generated. | Ask the pediatrician, county health department, school nurse, or MSDH Immunizations Office. |
| PDF will not open | Browser, pop-up, phone download, or PDF reader problem. | Save first, try another browser, print from desktop, or ask a trusted office to help print safely. |
| Record is incomplete | Some doses may be in provider, pharmacy, military, school, or previous state records. | Collect missing proof and contact MSDH or the original record holder. |
| School rejects the record | The school may require Form 121, a signed provider form, or an exemption record. | Ask the school exactly which document type and vaccine dose is missing. |
Mississippi Form 121 for School Entry, Daycare and Child Immunization Proof
Form 121 is Mississippi’s Certificate of Immunization Compliance. MSDH says Form 121 can be obtained from a child’s doctor, county health department, or downloaded online through MyIR when the child’s record is found. For a child entering Mississippi school or daycare for the first time, Form 121 certifies that required immunizations have been received.
Official source: MSDH Form 121 and exemptions page| Form 121 need | Best route | What to remember |
|---|---|---|
| School registration | MyIR Documents section, doctor, or county health department. | Ask the school whether it accepts the printed MyIR Form 121 before the deadline. |
| Daycare or Head Start | Provider or county health department if MyIR does not show the form. | Do not wait until the first day; missing doses may need review. |
| Moved from another state | Previous state record plus Mississippi provider or county health department review. | Out-of-state dates may need to be reviewed before a Mississippi form is accepted. |
| Record found but not complete | Pediatrician, county health department, or MSDH Immunizations Office. | Ask which specific vaccine dose is missing before repeating shots. |
| College or university | College health portal plus MyIR/provider record. | Colleges may ask for MMR, meningococcal, TB screening, or program-specific proof. |
Mississippi Form 122 and Vaccine Exemptions: Medical and Religious
Mississippi’s Form 121 page says Form 122 certifies that a child is exempt from required immunizations. MSDH’s exemption page explains medical and religious exemption routes. A vaccine record proves received doses; an exemption document explains why a required dose is not on file.
Official exemption source: MSDH medical and religious exemptions| Exemption intent | What the user means | Practical answer |
|---|---|---|
| Medical exemption | A vaccine may not be medically appropriate for the child. | Use the official MSDH medical exemption process and provider documentation route. |
| Religious exemption | Parent or guardian is requesting a religious exemption for school or daycare. | Follow the current MSDH religious exemption process and school instructions. |
| Form 122 | The school is asking for exemption proof instead of vaccine compliance proof. | Ask the school and MSDH which current exemption document and process apply. |
| Exemption returned | The form or process was incomplete or not accepted. | Use official MSDH instructions, fix missing fields, and resubmit through the correct route. |
Adult Mississippi Immunization Records: Work, College, Travel and Old Vaccine History
Adults often need Mississippi immunization records for healthcare jobs, nursing school, college, clinical rotations, travel, immigration medical exams, military paperwork, caregiver work, or personal medical history. MyIR is a good starting point, but older adult records may be incomplete if they were paper-only, given in another state, or never submitted to the registry.
| Adult need | Best first route | What to ask for |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MyIR, provider portal, pharmacy records, employer occupational health instructions. | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B, Tdap, flu, COVID-19, TB screening, or titers if required. |
| College or nursing school | College health portal plus MyIR and provider records. | Campus-specific vaccine upload, provider form, MMR proof, meningococcal record, or titers. |
| Travel | Travel clinic, pharmacy, provider, MyIR. | Routine vaccine dates, travel vaccine dates, and any country-specific proof. |
| Immigration exam | Civil surgeon instructions plus MyIR, provider, pharmacy, foreign records. | Civil-surgeon accepted vaccine proof, translations, and titers if accepted. |
| Old childhood record | MyIR, old providers, school files, family papers, last college, or previous state registry. | Complete vaccine history, school record copies, provider archives, or proof for specific vaccines. |
CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Kroger and Pharmacy Vaccine Records in Mississippi
Many adults received flu, COVID-19, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, hepatitis, Tdap, or travel vaccines at a pharmacy. Those doses may appear in MyIR/MIIX if reported and matched, but the pharmacy account is often the fastest source when the Mississippi online record is incomplete.
Check the CVS account used at the appointment and ask the pharmacy for vaccine history if it is missing online.
Use the same Walgreens profile, phone number, and email used when the vaccine was given.
Call the pharmacy location directly if the vaccine record does not show in your online account.
Ask for a printed immunization record with vaccine names and exact dates.
Check MyChart or the patient portal for the hospital or clinic system that gave the dose.
Ask for vaccine names, dates, and provider documentation before travel or immigration appointments.
What to Do If MyIR Cannot Find Your Mississippi Immunization Record
A failed MyIR match is common. It may mean your name, date of birth, phone, email, guardian details, or registry information does not line up exactly. It may also mean the vaccine was older, given outside Mississippi, stored only on paper, held by a pharmacy, or not reported to the registry.
- Use exact legal spelling. Try the name on the birth certificate, school record, driver’s license, or provider record. Also consider maiden name, previous last name, hyphenated name, or middle initial.
- Try the contact information tied to the record. For children, the parent or guardian phone/email used by the pediatrician or school may matter.
- Use the MyIR green chat bubble. MSDH says this can provide extra details to help locate records when the online match fails.
- Call MSDH Immunizations Office. MSDH lists 601-576-7751 and 1-855-767-0170 for help with registering, updating, or correcting records.
- Ask the original provider or county health department. The doctor, clinic, or county health department may hold the record or be able to update/report it.
- Check pharmacy, school, college, military, and employer records. These are especially useful for adult records and COVID-19, flu, RSV, shingles, or travel vaccines.
- Check another state registry. Use the CDC IIS contacts directory if the vaccine was given in Louisiana, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas, Texas, Georgia, Florida, or another state.
Mississippi Immunization Records Near Me: Jackson, Gulfport, Hattiesburg, Southaven, Biloxi, Tupelo and County Health Departments
“Mississippi immunization records near me” usually means the online match failed, the school deadline is close, a printed Form 121 is needed, or the person needs local help. Start online with MyIR, then use county health department support, provider records, school help, or MSDH Immunizations Office when the record cannot be found.
Official county help: MSDH county health department locations| If you live near | Local intent | Best action |
|---|---|---|
| Jackson or Hinds County | Form 121, missing MyIR record, county help, school proof. | Try MyIR first, then contact the provider, school nurse, MSDH Immunizations Office, or county health department. |
| Gulfport, Biloxi or Harrison County | Coastal Mississippi school, daycare, pharmacy or adult record help. | Use MyIR, pharmacy/provider records, then county health department or MSDH help if no match appears. |
| Hattiesburg or Forrest/Lamar County | College, school, clinic, or Form 121 record issue. | Ask the school or college what proof format they accept before repeating vaccines or ordering titers. |
| Southaven or DeSoto County | Moved from Tennessee, Arkansas, or another state and need Mississippi proof. | Bring previous-state records to a provider or county health department for review. |
| Tupelo, Oxford, Starkville, Meridian or rural Mississippi | Old provider record, school file, pharmacy vaccine, or county assistance. | Check MyIR, doctor, pharmacy, last school/college, county health department, and previous state registry. |
Out-of-State, Military, VA, Tribal Clinic and Foreign Vaccine Records
Mississippi families often move between Louisiana, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas, Texas, Georgia, Florida, and other states. MyIR/MIIX may not automatically show vaccines given outside Mississippi unless those records were later added and matched correctly.
National official directory: CDC IIS contacts for immunization recordsContact the state where the vaccine was actually given, then bring the record to the Mississippi school, provider, or county health department.
Check military health records, VA records, TRICARE, base clinic records, and civilian MyIR records separately.
Ask the clinic or patient portal where the vaccine was administered. Do not assume every dose appears in MyIR instantly.
Bring the original record, translation if needed, and vaccine dates to the school, provider, civil surgeon, or county health department.
Ask the college health office whether it accepts previous-state records, titers, or provider-signed forms.
Ask the civil surgeon what proof, translations, and titer results are accepted before paying for labs.
Titer Tests When Mississippi Vaccine Records Are Lost
A titer is a blood test that may show immunity to certain diseases. Titers may help when adult childhood records are lost, especially for healthcare jobs, nursing programs, college clinical rotations, and some immigration needs. But the organization asking for proof decides whether titers are accepted.
| Situation | Titers may help with | Ask first |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask occupational health which lab result format they accept. |
| Nursing or medical school | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask whether positive IgG titers replace vaccine dates. |
| Immigration exam | Civil surgeon-reviewed vaccine proof. | Ask the civil surgeon before paying for labs. |
| K-12 or daycare | Limited cases only. | Follow Mississippi school, provider, Form 121, and MSDH instructions. |
Official Mississippi Immunization Record Links
Use official sources first. This page is an independent guide and is not MSDH, MyIR, MIIX, CDC, a school district, pharmacy, provider, county health department, college, or employer.
Official Mississippi page for MyIR records and Form 121 online access.
Open MSDH MyIRRegister, sign in, choose Mississippi, and use Find My Records.
Open MyIR MobileMain state immunization page with records, schedules, requirements, and contact routes.
Open MSDH immunizationsOfficial page explaining Form 121, Form 122, provider, county, and online routes.
Open Form 121 pageOfficial MSDH exemption guidance for required immunizations.
Open exemption pageFind local Mississippi county health department locations and appointment information.
Open county locationsFederal IIS page identifying Mississippi’s IIS as MIIX.
Open CDC Mississippi IISUse this when vaccines were given outside Mississippi.
Open CDC IIS contactsHelpful if you only need COVID-19 vaccine proof or pharmacy backup records.
Open COVID record guideSource Check and Trust Note
This guide was checked against Mississippi State Department of Health MyIR guidance, MSDH Form 121 and exemption guidance, MSDH county health department information, CDC Mississippi IIS policy information, CDC IIS contact guidance, MyIR Mobile information, and checked-live related ImmunizationRecord.org pages. Record access, MyIR matching, Form 121 availability, exemption rules, school requirements, provider participation, phone numbers, and accepted proof formats can change. Always verify final requirements with MSDH, MyIR, MIIX, your county health department, provider, school, employer, college, pharmacy, military record holder, or civil surgeon.
Mississippi Immunization Records FAQs
Start with the official MSDH MyIR page. Register or sign in with MyIR Mobile, choose Mississippi, use Find My Records, and check the Documents section if a matching record appears.
Open MSDH MyIR pageMyIR is the online service linked by MSDH that lets individuals view immunization records maintained by Mississippi, including children’s records, and print Form 121 when available.
Open MyIR MobileMIIX is the Mississippi Immunization Information Exchange. CDC identifies it as Mississippi’s immunization information system and says it includes records for vaccine recipients of all ages.
Open CDC Mississippi IISYes, when your child’s MyIR record is found and the document is available. MSDH says MyIR can let users print a certified copy of Form 121 required for school registration if the child is up to date.
Open MyIR instructionsForm 121 is Mississippi’s Certificate of Immunization Compliance. MSDH says it certifies that required immunizations have been received for school or daycare entry.
Open Form 121 guidanceForm 122 certifies that a child is exempt from required immunizations. MSDH lists medical and religious exemption guidance for required vaccinations.
Open exemption guidanceCommon reasons include mismatched name, date of birth, phone, email, parent or guardian details, old last name, out-of-state shots, pharmacy records, paper-only records, military records, or doses not reported to MIIX.
MSDH lists 601-576-7751 and 1-855-767-0170 for help with MyIR registration, record updates, or corrections. Verify current contact details on the MSDH page before sharing private information.
Open MSDH MyIR helpStart online with MyIR. If that fails, contact the provider, school, pharmacy, MSDH Immunizations Office, or county health department. MSDH lists county health department locations and appointment information online.
Find county health departmentsOut-of-state records can help a provider, county health department, or school review vaccine history, but the school may still need a Mississippi Form 121 or accepted exemption document. Ask the school what exact proof is required.
Contact the immunization registry or provider in the state where the vaccine was given. A Mississippi MyIR search may not show out-of-state doses unless they were later added and matched.
Open CDC IIS contactsThey may appear if the pharmacy reported the vaccine and the dose matched the correct Mississippi record. Still check the pharmacy account directly, especially for COVID-19, flu, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, hepatitis, Tdap, and travel vaccines.
MSDH says MyIR can print or save Mississippi COVID-19 Certificates of Vaccination for yourself or family members when records are available. You can also check the pharmacy or provider that gave the COVID-19 vaccine.
Open COVID vaccine record guideSometimes. Titers may help for some adult work, college, healthcare, or immigration needs, but the requesting organization decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for lab tests.
Try MyIR, then contact MSDH Immunizations Office, a county health department, the successor clinic, medical records custodian, old school, pharmacy, military record holder, or previous state registry.
No. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use MSDH, MyIR, MIIX, CDC, your provider, school, pharmacy, county health department, employer, college, or civil surgeon as the final authority.