via Wikipedia infobox
Mumps vaccines are vaccines which prevent mumps. When given to a majority of the population they decrease complications at the population level. Effectiveness when 90% of a population is vaccinated is estimated at 85%. Two doses are required for long term prevention. The initial dose is recommended between 12 and 18 months of age. The second dose is then typically given between two years and six years of age. Usage after exposure in those not already immune may be useful.
Side effects are usually mild. It may cause "slight soreness and swelling" at the site of injection, parotisis and mild fever. More significant side effects are rare. Evidence is insufficient to link the vaccine to complications such as neurological effects (beyond "occasional orchitis and sensorineural deafness"). The vaccine should not be given to people who are pregnant or have very poor immune system function. Poor outcomes among children of mothers who received the vaccine during pregnancy, however, have not been documented. Even though the vaccine is developed in chicken cells, it is generally safe to give to those with egg allergies.
via PubMed
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).