If you can't stand anti-vaxxers, head to Maine.

The Pine Tree State has the highest overall vaccination rates, according to new data.

The American Academy of Pediatrics has released a map that shows the vaccination rates for each state for MMR (measles, mumps and rubella), DTaP (diptheria, tetanus and whooping cough) and varicella (chickenpox) shots.

The data looked at the percentage of children between 19 and 35 months old who've had at least one dose.

Maine took the top spot with 92 percent for MMR, 96.6 percent for DTaP and 94.5 for varicella.

Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Nebraska were the other three states who appeared in the top 10 for each category.

The states with the highest MMR vaccination rates include: Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Maryland, Ohio, Tennessee, Mississippi, North Dakota, Nebraska and New Mexico

Huge strides have been made from vaccination, shrinking if not completely eliminating deaths from diseases such as polio, small pox, influenza, measles and whooping cough.

The national rates for each vaccine are:

84.6 percent for DPaT

91.9 percent for MMR

91 percent for varicella

And although these numbers have risen, an additional 1.5 million deaths could be prevented across the globe if more people were immunized, says the World Health Organization.

'All 50 states have what are called medical exemptions to vaccination, such as a severe reaction to vaccines, but those complications are rare,' Dr Sean O'Leary, a spokesperson for the American Academy of Pediatrics, told CBS News.

Forty-seven states allow for either religious or personal belief exemptions, some states even allowing for both.

California, Mississippi and West Virginia are the only states that don't allow exemptions.

However, there are varying degrees in the difficulty of obtaining those, O'Leary said.

Some require paperwork from a doctor to confirm an allergic reaction or other significant reason to skip the shots. Other cases demand for a face-to-face consultation with the pediatrician.

Finishing in the top for the highest rates of DTaP vaccine are California, New Mexico, South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island

The states most effective at administering the chickenpox vaccine are: Nebraska, Kansas, Georgia, North Carolina, Maryland, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Connecticut

California, in part, tightened its laws after a measles outbreak at Disneyland from 2014 to 2015 that sickened 147 people in the US.

The state began requiring youngsters who were entering public school at the start of this school year to be fully immunized, and vaccination rates are now the highest they've been since 2001.

Earlier this month, public health officials in California reported that 96 percent of kindergartners there had received all of their shots.

In Washington state, policy changes have made it tougher for parents to opt out of vaccines for their kids as well.

In 2015, a Spokane school district pulled 143 students from classrooms who lacked documentation proving they had received required immunizations.

Only between one and two percent of US families decline all vaccination, according to Dr O'Leary.

And only 10 to 11 percent of families use an alternative or delayed schedule.

Nine out of 10 families in the US follow the American Academy of Pediatrics' vaccine schedule.

'At end of day, most parents do vaccinate their kids,' Dr O'Leary said.

'I'd like to see giving those parents a voice. What we hear from is this very small percentage of anti-vaccine people - probably less than one percent of the population - who has mistrust of vaccines based on bad information.

'I think parents care about this issue a lot more than we realize.'