Having a negative blood type is rare in humans. About five percent of the population are a negative blood type. Negative blood types mean you are lacking an antibody in your blood to fight off certain infections or preventing miscarriages.
Yes
The blood type known as rh defines a particular strain or tendency towards particular traits or abnormalties in newborn babies. To determine a rh blood type, a blood test specifying that rh be tested is required.
rh negative is not a unique blood type. Rather, it means that the blood is missing the Rh factor that those with Rh positive blood. This is denotated by the word "positive" or "negative" that is said as part of the blood type, after the letter type, A, B, AB, or O.
Having a specific blood type does not elevate the level of any risk.
Knowing your blood type is important because if you are pregnant, having a negative blood type could put you in danger of having a miscarriage. Go to your doctor and see what blood type you have.
yes
There seems to be a slight difference between different ethnic groups, but generally less than 10% chance of having O negative blood type.
Yes. The two possible blood types for your children are type A and type O. (I'm not exactly sure about positive and negative.) You have a 75% chance of having a child with type A blood and a 25% chance of having a child with type O blood.
An individual who is blood type AB negative can receive any blood type that is negative. Somebody who is O negative can donate blood to anyone.
Yes, this is true. 100% of all children will have a negative blood type.
AB Negative is the rarest blood type with less than one percent of the population having that type. However, the person with this type of blood can also receive several other types.
O negative blood is the universal donor and can be given to any person with any type of blood. Other blood types can not do this because their antigens.