A baby is a person. Soooooo they have attitudes that vary each day. So some days the baby could be "negative" or "mad", but they could also be very happy.
Rh positive is dominate (R gene), Rh negative is recessive (r gene). I mom is Rr and dad is either Rr or rr, then baby could be rr giving Rh negative blood type.
Yes, she should be given RhoGam during her pregnancy to prevent the production of antibodies. She will definitely need the Rhogam to prevent harm to subsequent Rh positive babies in the future.
no
Yes. My mother is O positive and my father is O negative and I am O negative
A woman with a negative blood type (Rh negative) who has produced antibodies against her fetus with a positive blood type (Rh positive)
the child has o negative blood
Blood groups are A, B, and O. Each type of blood is either positive or negative. When a couple is planning on marriage, their blood type is not as important as the positive or negative aspect. A woman with negative blood types may encounter problems having children if her husband has a positive blood type. All blood types are compatible as long as they are both positive or negative.
Yes
Yes. Marriage is not dependant on blood type.
The blood type of any children would depend on the zygosity in the woman. (Both O and Rh negative are recessive, and will be homozygous in the man). If the woman is homozygous B, then the children will B. If the woman is heterozygous B, either O or B (with 50% chance of each). In the same way, if the woman is homozygous Rh positive, then the children will also be positive. If the woman is heterozygous, then children will be either positive or negative. In short, the possibilities for child blood types are either B or O, with Rh positive or negative.
Yes. Child will be either AO or BO and either rh positive or negative depending on the genetics of the father.
If you are a blood donor your blood can be given to anyone. Everyone who is O negative is OO negative, by father, husband and both my sons are all O negative. If you are a rhesus negative woman married to a rhesus positive man you may need to have Anti-D while pregnant and after delivery to prevent your blood becoming sensitised and affecting a Rhesus positive baby More elaborate answer on pregnancy in rhesus negative women: If you are a rhesus negative woman pregnant by a rhesus positive partner you WILL (typically only after the first pregnancy, but, it's suggested with any pregnancy of a Rh- woman) need a RhoGAM (Anti-D) injection in early pregnancy to protect the embryo from being miscarried from an attack by your immune system and again during or immediately after delivery to stop the fetal blood (which most likely will be positive) from mixing with your blood preventing your death. Negative can successfully mix with positive, but, positive will kill a negative.
yes there is no problem in this but if women is Rh negative and man is Rh positive then there can be a problem in second or third child
None what so ever.