Need Mississippi immunization records for school, Head Start, day care, college, work, healthcare training, travel, camp, sports, immigration paperwork, or your personal file? Mississippi’s public online route is MyIR, while the state registry/reporting system is tied to Mississippi’s immunization data and MIIX. This guide explains the safest official route, how to download or print Form 121 when available, and what to do when your record is missing or incorrect.
To get Mississippi immunization records online, start with the official Mississippi State Department of Health MyIR page. Create or access your MyIR account, choose “Find My Records,” enter the required personal information, and check the Documents section if a matching registry record is found. If available, you may be able to download or print an immunization history, Mississippi school Form 121, or a COVID-19 vaccination certificate.
Official next step: MSDH MyIR immunization records page or MyIR MobileIf MyIR cannot match your record, do not assume the vaccine was never given. The record may be under different details, held by a doctor or pharmacy, stored in a school file, entered in another state registry, or not yet corrected in Mississippi’s registry.
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What Mississippi Immunization Records Usually Include
Mississippi immunization records are vaccine history documents connected to vaccines reported to the state registry or stored by a doctor, public health clinic, school, pharmacy, county health department, employer clinic, military office, travel clinic, or another record holder. A record may show vaccine names, dose dates, school compliance status, and available document options.
Official background: Mississippi Immunization RegistryChildren’s records are often easier to locate because Mississippi school, Head Start, and day care requirements create regular documentation needs. Adult records can be harder because older doses may be in paper files, out-of-state registries, pharmacy accounts, military systems, employer health files, or old provider portals.
For broad immunization context: MSDH immunizations pageUseful for personal files, employment, college, travel, healthcare training, and backup documentation.
Use MyIRMississippi school immunization entry form that may be printable through MyIR when the child is up to date.
School requirementsDoctor, clinic, pharmacy, county health department, school nurse, or travel clinic may have backup proof.
MyIR vs MIIX: What Mississippi Users Should Know
Mississippi residents often see both “MyIR” and “MIIX” when searching for records. MyIR is the public-facing route MSDH points families to for online access. MIIX is connected to Mississippi immunization reporting and provider-side registry workflows. For most parents, students, and adults, MyIR is the practical starting point.
Official pages: MSDH MyIR and MSDH MIIX immunization reporting| Term | What it means | Who usually uses it |
|---|---|---|
| MyIR | Online account route for individuals and families to look up matching immunization records. | Parents, guardians, adults, students, families. |
| MyIR Mobile | The online MyIR platform where users register, select Mississippi, verify, and search records. | Public users accessing records online. |
| MIIX | Mississippi Immunization Information Exchange reporting/registry system connected to provider workflows. | Healthcare providers and reporting facilities. |
| Form 121 | Mississippi school immunization compliance form. | Parents, schools, child care, Head Start, providers. |
| Form 122 | Certificate issued after accepted medical/religious exemption process. | MSDH, parents, schools, day care after exemption approval. |
How to Get Mississippi Immunization Records Online Step by Step
Use this workflow when you need a record for school, day care, Head Start, college, work, healthcare training, travel, camp, sports, immigration medical paperwork, or personal files.
- Open the official MSDH MyIR immunization records page. Start from the Mississippi State Department of Health page before entering private information. This helps you avoid copycat record sites.
- Create or sign into your MyIR account. If you are new to MyIR, register, select Mississippi, enter your name and email address, create a password, and verify your account by phone or email when prompted.
- Choose “Find My Records.” This is the key lookup step. Enter the required personal information so the system can try to locate immunization records for you or your family.
- Open the matched account if MyIR finds a record. Review the name, date of birth, vaccine names, dose dates, and available document types before downloading or submitting anything.
- Check the Documents section. MSDH says this is where an immunization history or Form 121 may be available to download or print after the record is located.
- Use MyIR chat or MSDH phone help if no match appears. If details do not exactly match, MSDH points users to the green chat bubble on MyIR and lists phone help through the Immunizations Office.
- Save the record securely. Store a PDF and one paper copy in a private place. Avoid uploading vaccine records to random websites or emailing them unless the receiving office gives secure instructions.
What Details You Need Before Searching MyIR
MyIR matching works best when the details you enter are close to the details stored in Mississippi’s registry or by the provider who gave the vaccine. Small differences can block a match, especially for children, older adults, people with name changes, out-of-state transfers, and pharmacy vaccines.
| Detail | What to use | Common problem |
|---|---|---|
| First name | Legal first name used by provider, school, or clinic. | Nickname or short name does not match. |
| Last name | Current or vaccine-record last name. | Maiden name, hyphenated name, spelling change, or old last name. |
| Date of birth | Exact month, day, and year. | One wrong digit can prevent a match. |
| Email and phone | Information connected to the MyIR account or record if requested. | Old phone or email may have been used earlier. |
| Parent or guardian details | Guardian information tied to the child record when requested. | Wrong guardian or old household details may block child record linking. |
| Where vaccines were given | Doctor, county health department, pharmacy, school clinic, employer clinic, or previous state. | The record may be held outside MyIR. |
Mississippi Form 121 for School Entry, Head Start and Day Care
Form 121 is Mississippi’s immunization compliance form commonly needed for school registration. MSDH says MyIR can let users print a certified copy of Form 121 when a child is up to date on age-appropriate immunizations and the record is available.
Official pages: MSDH MyIR Form 121 information and MSDH required immunizationsIf Form 121 does not appear in MyIR, the child may not be fully up to date, the record may not match, a recent vaccine may not be updated, or the school may need guidance from the provider or county health department. Ask the school exactly what it accepts before the deadline.
For county help: MSDH county health departments| Form 121 need | Best route | Practical tip |
|---|---|---|
| School entry | MyIR Documents section, provider, or county health department. | Print early and ask the school if the copy is acceptable. |
| Child care or Head Start | MyIR, pediatrician, local health department. | Do not wait until the first attendance day. |
| Recent vaccine missing | Original provider or clinic that gave the dose. | Ask whether the dose has been entered or reported. |
| Moved from another state | Previous state registry plus Mississippi provider review. | Bring the out-of-state record to a Mississippi provider or county office. |
| Not up to date | Doctor, pediatrician, clinic, or county health department. | Ask what dose is next, not just “where is my form?” |
Child Mississippi Immunization Records for Parents and Guardians
Parents and guardians usually need Mississippi immunization records for day care, Head Start, kindergarten, K-12 school, transfers, sports, camps, college preparation, or health program forms. Start with MyIR, then ask the child’s provider, county health department, school nurse, or previous state registry when something is missing.
Start here: MSDH MyIR child and family record accessIf the child has recent vaccines, check whether the dose has had time to appear in the record. If the child moved to Mississippi from Louisiana, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Florida, or another state, the older dose may still be in the previous state’s registry or provider system.
For another state: CDC IIS contacts by stateAdult Mississippi Immunization Records and Older Vaccine History
Adults often need vaccine proof for healthcare jobs, nursing school, college, military paperwork, immigration medical exams, caregiver work, travel, long-term care employment, or personal medical files. Start with MyIR, but also check providers, pharmacies, hospital portals, employer health offices, military records, old schools, and previous state registries.
Related live guide: Immunization Records MS: Portal, Phone & Email Options| Adult need | Where to check first | What to ask for |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MyIR, provider, pharmacy, employer health office. | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B, Tdap, flu, COVID-19, TB-related paperwork, and required titers. |
| College or nursing school | MyIR, college health portal, provider records. | School-specific form, vaccine dates, or accepted lab proof. |
| Travel | Travel clinic, pharmacy, MyIR, provider. | Routine vaccines, travel vaccines, and exact dates. |
| Immigration medical exam | Civil surgeon instructions, MyIR, pharmacy, foreign records. | Accepted proof before paying for titers or repeat vaccines. |
| Personal archive | MyIR, provider portal, pharmacy account, paper records. | Complete readable immunization history. |
Mississippi School, Day Care, Head Start, College and Work Immunization Records
MSDH says immunizations against childhood diseases are required by Mississippi law to enter school, Head Start, or day care, unless an exemption applies. For school entry, Form 121 is the document many Mississippi families look for first.
Official school requirement page: MSDH required immunizationsColleges and healthcare programs may have different proof requirements. A college may ask for MMR, meningococcal, hepatitis B, varicella, Tdap, flu, COVID-19, TB screening, titers, or a portal upload. Always ask the receiving office what format it accepts before paying for tests or repeating vaccines.
MSDH college/adult context: MSDH immunizations page| Who is asking? | Likely proof needed | Best practical action |
|---|---|---|
| Day care or Head Start | Form 121 or accepted immunization documentation. | Check MyIR, then contact provider or county health department. |
| K-12 school | Current Form 121 or exemption certificate if applicable. | Print from MyIR if available and confirm with the school. |
| College | Campus-specific upload or health form. | Use MyIR plus college health portal instructions. |
| Healthcare employer | Vaccine dates, titers, flu/COVID policy proof, TB paperwork. | Ask occupational health for the exact checklist. |
| Sports or camp | Printable vaccine history or Form 121. | Ask if a provider signature or school form is required. |
What to Do If Mississippi Immunization Records Are Missing or Incorrect
A missing MyIR result can happen for several normal reasons. Your information may not exactly match, the vaccine may not have been reported, a recent dose may not be updated, the record may be under a previous name, the dose may be in another state registry, or the vaccine may be stored by a pharmacy, provider, school, employer, or military system.
Official registry help: Mississippi Immunization Registry| Problem | What it means | What to try next |
|---|---|---|
| Name mismatch | Record may use a maiden name, old last name, hyphenated name, nickname, or different spelling. | Try the name used by the provider, school, or pharmacy. |
| Wrong date of birth | One wrong digit can block a match. | Check the birth date on old records and provider profiles. |
| Record not updated | A recent shot may not be reflected yet. | Ask the vaccinating provider whether the dose was entered or reported. |
| Provider never reported it | The dose may exist only in the provider or pharmacy record. | Request a vaccine administration record from the original provider. |
| Duplicate or possible match | The system may need extra details to locate the right record. | Use MyIR chat or call MSDH Immunizations Office. |
| Out-of-state vaccine | Shots from Louisiana, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Florida, or another state may be elsewhere. | Use the previous state registry or original provider. |
Mississippi Immunization Records Near Me: County Health Department Help
People often search “Mississippi immunization records near me” when a school deadline is close or MyIR cannot match the record. The practical route is to start online with MyIR, then contact the provider, pharmacy, school, or county health department most connected to the vaccine record.
Official county office page: MSDH county health departments| If you are near | Common record issue | Best action |
|---|---|---|
| Jackson | MSDH office, school Form 121, older provider records. | Use MyIR first, then call the provider, school, county office, or MSDH Immunizations. |
| Gulfport or Biloxi | Pharmacy, military, travel, school or out-of-state records. | Check MyIR, pharmacy records, military/VA records, and county health department help. |
| Hattiesburg | College, healthcare training, school records. | Use MyIR and ask the school or employer what proof format it accepts. |
| Southaven or Olive Branch | Mississippi-Tennessee record split. | Check Mississippi MyIR and Tennessee records if vaccines were given across the border. |
| Tupelo or Meridian | Provider, pharmacy, child school record, older paper files. | Call the original provider or county office if MyIR is incomplete. |
Mississippi Pharmacy, COVID-19, Flu and Travel Vaccine Records
Many Mississippi adults received COVID-19, flu, RSV, shingles, pneumonia, hepatitis, Tdap, or travel vaccines at a pharmacy, workplace clinic, campus clinic, county clinic, or travel clinic. MyIR may show some records if the dose was reported and matched, but pharmacy accounts are often the fastest backup source.
MSDH says MyIR can print or save Mississippi COVID-19 Certificates of Vaccination when available: MSDH MyIR records pageCheck your Walgreens account or call the pharmacy location where the vaccine was given.
Check CVS or MinuteClinic records using the same email, phone, and profile used at the appointment.
Ask the pharmacy for an immunization history if the portal does not show a dose.
Contact the pharmacy directly for adult, travel, flu, RSV, shingles, or COVID records.
Check MyChart or clinic portals if vaccines were given through a medical group.
Contact the state or pharmacy where the shot was given; Mississippi MyIR may not show it automatically.
Mississippi Medical and Religious Exemption Records
Some families are not looking for a vaccine record; they are looking for exemption documentation. MSDH explains separate medical and religious exemption processes. Medical exemption requests use Form 139-M, religious exemption requests use Form 139-R, and an accepted exemption results in a Certificate of Medical/Religious Exemption, Form 122.
Official exemption page: MSDH medical and religious exemptions| Exemption type | Form/process | Important note |
|---|---|---|
| Medical exemption | Form 139-M completed by an appropriate physician and reviewed by MSDH. | Only accepted documentation from MSDH is official proof. |
| Religious exemption | Form 139-R submitted through county health department process with appointment. | MSDH notes appointment is required through the county route. |
| Accepted exemption certificate | Form 122 Certificate of Medical/Religious Exemption. | School/day care proof depends on the official certificate, not a personal letter. |
| Record not found | Not the same as an exemption. | Missing proof should be handled through MyIR, provider, MSDH, or medical guidance first. |
Titer Tests When Mississippi Vaccine Records Are Lost
A titer is a blood test that may show immunity to certain diseases. It can help in some adult college, healthcare employment, medical training, or immigration situations when vaccine records are truly lost. But the receiving office decides whether titers are accepted.
| Situation | Titers may help with | Ask before paying |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare job | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask occupational health for exact lab and threshold requirements. |
| Nursing or medical school | MMR, varicella, hepatitis B. | Ask if positive IgG titers replace vaccine dates. |
| Immigration medical exam | Civil surgeon-reviewed proof. | Ask the civil surgeon first. |
| K-12 school or day care | Limited situations only. | Follow MSDH, school, provider, and Form 121/exemption instructions. |
Official Mississippi Immunization Record Links
Use official Mississippi and CDC sources first. This page is an independent guide and is not MSDH, MyIR, MIIX, CDC, a school district, a pharmacy, a provider, an employer, or a county health department.
Official Mississippi page for MyIR access, Form 121, record printing, and MyIR help.
Open MSDH MyIRPublic account platform linked by MSDH for record access when a match is found.
Open MyIR MobileOfficial background on Mississippi’s immunization registry and record help routes.
Open registry pageProvider-side Mississippi immunization reporting and MIIX access information.
Open MIIX pageSchool entry, child care, Form 121, and requirement documents.
Open requirementsLocal public health office lookup for Mississippi county-level help.
Find county officesMedical/religious exemption policies, Form 139-M, Form 139-R, and Form 122 information.
Open exemptionsFind another state registry if vaccines were given outside Mississippi.
Open CDC directoryGeneral Mississippi immunization schedules, adult, travel, school, and vaccine information.
Open MSDH immunizationsSource Check and Trust Note
This Mississippi guide was checked against official MSDH MyIR guidance, Mississippi Immunization Registry information, MIIX reporting information, MSDH required immunization pages, county health department resources, exemption policy pages, and CDC state registry guidance. Because MyIR screens, Form 121 availability, school requirements, provider reporting, county processes, exemption rules, and phone support can change, always verify final requirements with MSDH, MyIR, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, college, county health department, or civil surgeon.
Mississippi Immunization Records FAQs
Start with the official MSDH MyIR page. Create or sign into your MyIR account, choose “Find My Records,” enter the required personal information, and check the Documents section if your record is matched.
Open MSDH MyIRMyIR is the public-facing online record access route linked by MSDH. It can help individuals and families access available immunization records when the account information matches the registry record.
Open MyIR MobileMIIX is Mississippi’s immunization reporting/registry system used in provider and reporting workflows. Public users usually start with MyIR, not provider reporting tools.
Open MIIX pageYes, when your MyIR account matches the record and the child is up to date, MSDH says you may be able to print a certified copy of Form 121 required for school registration.
MyIR Form 121 informationForm 121 is Mississippi’s immunization compliance form commonly used for school entry, Head Start, day care, and child immunization proof.
Required immunizationsCommon reasons include name mismatch, wrong date of birth, old phone or email, guardian mismatch, duplicate records, vaccines not reported, recent doses not updated, pharmacy records, or vaccines given outside Mississippi.
MSDH lists the Immunizations Office at 601-576-7751 and 1-855-767-0170 for MyIR registration or record correction help. The registry page also lists 1-800-634-9251 outside the Jackson area. Verify current details before sharing private information.
MS registry contact informationParents and guardians can use MyIR when their details match the record. If the record is missing or Form 121 does not appear, contact the child’s provider, school, county health department, or MSDH.
Adults should start with MyIR, but older adult records may be incomplete. Also check providers, pharmacies, employers, schools, military records, previous state registries, and paper files.
MSDH says MyIR can print or save Mississippi COVID-19 Certificates of Vaccination for yourself or family members when available. If missing, check the pharmacy or clinic that gave the dose.
MSDH MyIR records pagePharmacy vaccines may appear if reported and matched correctly, but pharmacy accounts are often the fastest backup source for flu, COVID-19, RSV, shingles, travel, and adult vaccines.
Not always. Vaccines given outside Mississippi may be in another state registry, provider record, pharmacy account, school file, military file, or employer health record.
Find another state registryMSDH has separate medical and religious exemption processes. Medical exemption requests use Form 139-M, religious exemption requests use Form 139-R through the county health department route, and an accepted exemption results in Form 122.
MSDH exemption pageSometimes. Titers may help for certain adult school, healthcare, employment, or immigration requirements, but the requesting office decides whether titers are accepted. Ask before paying for lab tests.
No. ImmunizationRecord.org is an independent informational guide. Use MSDH, MyIR, your provider, pharmacy, school, employer, county health department, college, or civil surgeon as the final authority.