I am O positive and my husband is B+. We have two children.
Our first child, a daughter, had O+ blood type.
Our second child, a son, had B+ blood type. He was born with high levels of bilirubin (had jaundice). In the old days they would do a blood transfusion (which I am opposed to) but now almost all cases are treated with exposure to special lighting.
We stopped there.
O positive
Yes, a child with B+ blood can have a father with A- blood. In order for this to occur, the mother would need to be B+ or AB+ and the father would need to be heterozygous.
The blood would be A+, the child's is always pretty much what the Father's is.
yes it is true that the child would have either B or O positive blood groups only. This is because the father may have the genotype OB if he is heterozygous and BB if he is homozygous. So is the case for the mother. Rh factor determines if the blood group is positive or negative. Since the parents are positive, so would be the child. Thus upon recombination, the only possible blood groups will be O or B.
The child could be A+, AB+, B+, A-, AB-, or B-. That is, any blood type except O positive or O negative.
The father would be fat.
A+
No, the father would have to have B or AB.
O positive
either "AB" or "A".
if your child is negative, i would ask for a blood sample from the mailman
If mother is heterozygote yes.
if your child is negative, i would ask for a blood sample from the mailman
No. If they were both O postitive the child would have to be O positive.
The child's blood type could be B positive or O positive.
No. The child would be O and Rh+ just like the parents.
Probably AB+ blood.