Since chicken pox seems to mutate into worse cases as the season progresses, my thought is that the children who get it last (or who are older before catching it) are sicker. Temperatures run higher as does the number of lesions.
Children who have not had the chickenpox vaccine are most susceptible to chickenpox. Adults can get chickenpox, especially if they have never had it, nor been exposed to someone with it as a child. As with any virus, people who have autoimmune disorders, who are infirm in some way, or who are generally in poor health are more susceptible to any form of illness.
The most common victim for chicken pox is young children
Children from one to five years age group, are most commonly affected by chickenpox in most part of the world.
Gender has no determining factor.
kids
what races and gender are affected the most and with which type of cancer
The most common areas to be affected are the face and trunk, which correspond to the areas where the chickenpox rash is most concentrated.
People of any age and both genders can get chickenpox.
Chickenpox affected history by killing off a large number of people. This occurred before a vaccine was invented to prevent the disease from occurring in humans.
The skin and mucous membranes are the body parts most affected by chickenpox and shingles. Shingles also affects the nerves in the area that has the rash.
Women are most commonly affected by Fibromyalgia.
male, because they are more actives
Tornadoes do not discriminate by race, gender, or social standing. Those affected most are whoever happen to be caught in the path of one.
College athletic programs were most affected by the passage of Title IX in 1972.
Chickenpox is more likely to be found in temperate countries than in tropical countries, and is more likely in countries in which chickenpox vaccination is not routine for children.
A carrier of chickenpox is someone who is infected but doesn't have symptoms. Most people who get chickenpox do not get infected twice. You are not likely to get chickenpox as an adult if you had them as a child.
no