Nikki P
Do not understand why this is in cooking other than the use of the word..Kid.
But a lot depends on what is called "herd immunity"
If most of the people are immunized then the chances for the non immunized person catching a preventable disease lowers considerably. When this "isolated" person goes into the larger community the herd immunity lessens and leaves the un immunized person at a greater risk for catching a preventable disease.
Isolated there is little risk but once exposed to others the risk increases.
So how long can the person live, quite a while if conditions are good but if this person becomes ill or otherwise has a weakened immune system they can be more susceptible to disease that normally the body could fight off but with a weak immunity they could sub-come to any number of diseases.
Anonymous
Here's the funny problem:
Smallpox has been eradicated in the US. Nobody has it to give it to you if you're not vaccinated. However, if it did get in somehow say through illegal travel by someone who does have it, it can then infect the un-vaccinated, mutating as it spreads only among those not vaccinated until it mutates to a form the vaccine hasn't built antibodies for.
Things like bird flu do this. Normally we can't get their viruses. They simply can't act on our cells until, through a similar host such as pigs I believe in this case mutate it until it can.
Barring some widespread epi(above)demic(people/population) there shouldn't be any lessened life expectancy associated with the lack of vaccination. Of course, given the times that does happen, you can officially pull a number out to scare people.
Kinda like Obamacare, I don't want insurance or to help pay for yours. But if I need it, I'll just leach off you. You won't be exposed to a disease while unvaccinated because everyone else is vaccinated...until you are.
ckngbbbls
till they get an illness and it turns bad and kills them.
some are lucky, some are not.
then there are the ones who don't get any childhood illness till they are adults and the mumps can render an adult male sterile. Or an unvaccinated female is pregnant and is exposed to another unvaccinated person, gets the German measles and her unborn baby gets it too and is born blind or deaf or with other defects or born dead.
Or later in life, after having had the chicken pox, the adult gets Bells Palsy, a condition that mimics a stroke and may or may not leave that person permanently impaired...or they get shingles, an extremely painful bunch of blisters that last for months and can have secondary infections.
Good time
Anonymous
Depends on how long it takes him to catch mumps, measles, whooping cough and all those preventable diseases.
Anonymous
About the same as everyone else their just supposedly more susceptible to more diseases.