Grok Answers: Data on deaths where MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) is the primary cause is limited, as it’s rarely listed explicitly on death certificates due to its viral nature and complications. Below is a year-by-year estimate based on available U.S. data, primarily from CDC and WHO reports, focusing on confirmed measles-related deaths, as mumps and rubella deaths are even less frequently reported. Note that direct attribution to MMR as the "primary cause" is challenging due to secondary complications like pneumonia or encephalitis. 2015: 0 deaths (no reported measles deaths in the U.S.) 2016: 0 deaths (no reported measles deaths in the U.S.) 2017: 0 deaths (no reported measles deaths in the U.S.) 2018: 0 deaths (no reported measles deaths in the U.S.) 2019: 0 deaths (no confirmed measles deaths in the U.S., despite 1,300 cases) 2020: 0 deaths (no reported measles deaths in the U.S.) 2021: 0 deaths (no reported measles deaths in the U.S.) 2022: 0 deaths (no reported measles deaths in the U.S.) 2023: 0 deaths (59 U.S. cases, no deaths reported) 2024: 0 deaths (285 U.S. cases, no deaths reported) 2025 (up to April): 2 deaths (884 U.S. cases, 2 measles-related deaths in Texas and New Mexico)
Total (2015–2025): 2 confirmed measles-related deaths in the U.S. No specific data isolates mumps or rubella as primary causes in this period. Global data suggests most MMR-related deaths occur in unvaccinated populations in low-income regions, not directly attributable to the vaccine itself.
1/50 children. what is causing it?
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