Yes, especially if it was from an africanized or killer bee. Make sure to stay away from bee swarms. Below I pasted a link to explain the different types of bees wasps and yellow jackets
http://www.beeremovalspecialist.com/bees/bee-identification.html
Baking soda and water spread on the bee sting area is a good all-natural bee sting treatment. Ice on the affected area afterwards will assist in bringing down the inflammation.
put some straight ammonia on a cotton ball, it will draw out poison.
Only in rare cases will a bee sting without being seriously provoked and many species of bee don't sting at all.The sting of a Honeybee (worker) is barbed, so it remains under your skin after it has stung you. When the bee attempts to fly off her intestines and some muscles are pulled out with the poison sac. The muscles make the poison pump into the skin.
once. the sting the bee gives causes the stinger to release into the person and tear from the bee itself. The bee thus soon reportedly dies as a result of the removal of its stinger.
Because of the reaction of the skin.
Normally bee sting not lethal still you need to seek expert opinion to remove the sting embedded into your skin
No. But if saliva from a rabid animal got on the wound caused by the sting (the puncture in your skin) then you could.
When a bee stings, the sting remains together with the venom sac and the muscles that pump the venom continue to work for up to a minute and will be driving the sting deeper into the skin. The longer you leave the sting in the skin, the more venom is pumped in, making the sting worse.
Bees don't bite, they sting. When a honey bee stings, it leaves the barb of the sting behind, sticking out of your skin. Maybe that's what you got confused with.
There is no record of a famous person dying of a bee sting. However, around 100 people die every year as a result of allergic reactions to bee stings.
If it is a good sting, the venom sac will remain with the stinger. If the bee keeps the stinger, he will live. While some bee species, like the honey bee can only sting once before dying; some bees species, like the bumblebee, can sting multiple times and still live. this is because the honey bee stinger is barbed and tears off whie stinging, while the bumblebee has a smooth stinger that does not tear off while stinging.
The self-defensive sinking of a stinger, with the resulting death of the bee, not the wasp, into skin defines a bee or a wasp sting.