No. O negative is the universal donor.
O positive
O positive blood can be transfused to any person with a positive Rh factor, making it a universal donor for Rh-positive individuals. However, it is not universal for all blood types because some individuals may have antibodies to other blood group antigens present in O positive blood.
O positive blood type can be transfused to individuals with O positive and O negative blood types. It is considered a universal donor for Rh positive blood types, but is not suitable for those with Rh negative blood type.
yes because o positive is the universal blood type
If you are AB positive (AB+ is universal receiver for positive blood group) then you can receive blood from A+, B+ & O+ & if you are AB negative then you cn receive blood from A-, B- & O-.
Type O negative blood is a universal donor blood type. In normal circumstances, anyone can receive type O negative blood in a transfusion. When it comes to plasma donation, type AB positive is a universal donor.
i think its O positive
People with O positive blood are universal donors. This means that they when they donate blood it can be used by any recipient. People with AB positive blood are universal recipients which means that they can take blood donated by any blood type.
Group O is the universal donor. The downside for people with type O blood is that although their blood can go to anyone with any type (A,B, or O), they can only receive type O for themselves. Luckily, O is common.
O negative is the universal donor because when O+ve blood group is transfused to -ve blood group recipient, antibodies are produced which causes hemolysis of Rh +ve labelled blood cells. When O-ve blood is transfused to Rh +ve recipient, no antibodies are produced as donor blood has no Rh factor present on blood cells, so no transfusion reaction occurs. Thus, O -ve is universal donor.
No because type O blood is the universal donor type meaning they can give anyone blood but they can only receive blood from type O people.
Universal Donors