No. Rh+ is not rare. If anything Rh- is the rare one. Look at this from the wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type#Rhesus_blood_group_system
yes
Yes. You will occasionally have problems if the mother is Rh negative and the father is Rh positive; if the baby is Rh positive, there is a possibility for complications if the baby's blood poisons the mother. This is pretty rare these days.
It's rare, but can easily be explained by genetics. The A positive parent could be AA or AO for blood group, and the O positive parent would have to be OO for blood group. Both parents would have to be heterozygous for rh factor, Rh+ Rh- . So the A negative child would have to have inherited an A and O allele from the parents, and an Rh- allele from both parents. This gives the phenotype of A negative.
Theoretically :This is rare actually, and there is two possible genotypes1-Both parents are positive but with different alleles ( heterozygous )---> Rh+Rh- vs Rh+Rh-here there is 25% of kids may have Rh-Rh-2-Both parents are positive with same alleles ( homozygous )---> Rh+Rh+ vs Rh+Rh+here there is Zero% of kids to be negative, because all will be positive.Medical Answers need confirmation and re-confirmation.
The problems will happen regarding conceiving the child if the Male is of Rh Positive and Female is Rh Negative.The problem due to different blood groups like A, AB, B, O are very very rare.
O Rh D Positive is not any thing . there is no Rh so there is no O Rh Positive.
No, AB Rh negative is the rarest blood type.
If a person has the Rh factor, then they are positive. If they don't have the Rh factor, they are negative. The Rh factor is dominant, so a mother with it would have an Rh positive baby even if the father is negative for the Rh factor.
Rh positive is more common than Rh negative. Approximately 85% of the population is Rh positive.
I have a very rare blood type as well, i found this out when pregnant with my daughter. We have two completely different blood types i am rh negative and she is rh positive.
It depends on the genotype of the Rh+ parent. If that person is heterozygous, then yes there is a 50% chance of an Rh- baby.Father's Group (negative)Mother's Group (positive heterozygous)Rh +Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh -, Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh - Rh -http://www.bloodbook.com/inherited.htmlIf the positive parent is homozygous, the baby will be positive:Father's Group (negative)Mother's Group (positive homozygous)Rh +Rh +Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh -Rh +, Rh -Rh + Rh -
Rh factor is a protein that is found in the blood of about 85% of the population. Those who have the factor are Rh positive, while those who don't, are Rh negative. A person who is Rh negative can safely donate blood to persons with or without the protein. A person who is Rh positive can only donate to those who are Rh positive.