RxNorm 218128

M-M-R II

RxNorm Semantic Concepts

RxNorm semantic concepts for the RxCUI 218128 unique identifier include: M-M-R II (1180031).

RxNorm Atom ID: 1180031 - Brand Name
M-M-R II

RXCUI:
218128 - RxNorm Unique Identifier for a concept (Concept ID)
LAT:
ENG - Language of the Term
RXAUI:
1180031 - Unique identifier for the atom (RxNorm Atom ID)
Is Prescribable?
YES - This drug is part of the RxNorm Current Prescribable Content, a subset of RxNorm that includes all drugs available for prescription in the United States. The Current Prescribable subset also includes over-the-counter drugs.
Concept Description:
M-M-R II - Description of concept identifier
Term Type (TTY):
BN - Term type in source with name and description
Term Type Name:
Brand Name - Name of term type in source
Term Type Description:
A proprietary name for a family of products containing a specific active ingredient. - Description of term type in source
Code:
218128 - "Most useful" source asserted identifier. If the source vocabulary has more than one identifier, or a RxNorm-generated source entry identifier. (if the source vocabulary has none.)
Suppress Flag:
N
Suppressible flag. Values = N, O, Y, or E. N - not suppressible. O - Specific individual names (atoms) set as Obsolete because the name is no longer provided by the original source. Y - Suppressed by RxNorm editor. E - unquantified, non-prescribable drug with related quantified, prescribable drugs. NLM strongly recommends that users not alter editor-assigned suppressibility.
CVF:
4096 - Content view flag. RxNorm includes one value, '4096', to denote inclusion in the Current Prescribable Content subset. All rows with CVF='4096' can be found in the subset.
Source:
RXNORM - Concept source abbreviation
Source Name:
RxNorm Vocabulary - The official name for a source
Source Version:
20AA_240401F - The source version
Source Date:
March 04, 2024 - RxNorm data last updated
Source License Contact:
RxNorm Customer Service

U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike

Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM

[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source license contact information
Source Content Contact:
RxNorm Customer Service

U.S. National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike

Bethesda
MD
United States
20894
(888) FIND-NLM

[email protected]
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/umls/rxnorm/ - The source content contact information
Source Short Name:
RxNorm work done by the National Library of Medicine - The short name of a source as used by the NLM Knowledge Source Server

RxNorm Atom 1180031 Attributes

PropertyValueExplanation
RXN BN CARDINALITYmultiCardinality of RxNorm Brand Name Atom

* This product uses publicly available data courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM), National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services; NLM is not responsible for the product and does not endorse or recommend this or any other product.

Patient Education

MMR Vaccine (Measles, Mumps, and Rubella)


Why get vaccinated? Measles, mumps, and rubella are viral diseases that can have serious consequences. Before vaccines, these diseases were very common in the United States, especially among children. They are still common in many parts of the world. Measles: Measles virus causes symptoms that can include fever, cough, runny nose, and red, watery eyes, commonly followed by a rash that covers the whole body. Measles can lead to ear infections, diarrhea, and infection of the lungs (pneumonia). Rarely, measles can cause brain damage or death. Mumps: Mumps virus causes fever, headache, muscle aches, tiredness, loss of appetite, and swollen and tender salivary glands under the ears on one or both sides. Mumps can lead to deafness, swelling of the brain and/or spinal cord covering (encephalitis or meningitis), painful swelling of the testicles or ovaries, and, very rarely, death. Rubella(also known as German Measles): Rubella virus causes fever, sore throat, rash, headache, and eye irritation. Rubella can cause arthritis in up to half of teenage and adult women. If a woman gets rubella while she is pregnant, she could have a miscarriage or her baby could be born with serious birth defects. These diseases can easily spread from person to person. Measles doesn't even require personal contact. You can get measles by entering a room that a person with measles left up to 2 hours before. Vaccines and high rates of vaccination have made these diseases much less common in the United States.
[Learn More]


* Please review the disclaimer below.