I would say you can ask your doctor or get one from where you give blood at. You can also go to the online donor sites and find one that you could print out.
Individuals with blood type AB are considered universal recipients because they have both A and B antigens on their red blood cells, allowing them to accept blood from donors with blood types A, B, AB, and O without experiencing a severe immune response.
People who have type O blood are universal donors, but not universal recipients. They can donate to anyone, but can only receive blood from another type O person. This is why type O blood is always in great demand by blood banks.
I assume you meant to ask "O- or O+", but it wouldn't allow the punctuation. O- (O-negative) is the universal donor.
A person with A negative blood will form antibodies to Rh + and to B
O- is universal donor because o has no protein while all other o+ and the rest of them do. So when someone donates 0- the white blood cells of the receipent won't react. Therefor the transfusion was successful And that's why o- is the universal blood type
Blood groups are classified into four main types: A, B, AB, and O, each of which can be Rh-positive or Rh-negative. Donors must match their blood type with that of the recipients to avoid transfusion reactions. For example, a person with type A blood can donate to individuals with type A or AB blood, while type O donors are universal donors and can give to all blood types. Conversely, AB recipients are universal recipients, able to receive blood from any group.
People with blood type O are universal donors, not universal recipients.
Blood type A has A antigens on the surface of red blood cells and B antibodies in the plasma. A person with blood type A can receive blood from donors with blood type A or O, and can donate to recipients with blood type A or AB.
Individuals with blood type AB are considered universal recipients because they have both A and B antigens on their red blood cells, allowing them to accept blood from donors with blood types A, B, AB, and O without experiencing a severe immune response.
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No, any type B blood types including B positive are not universal donors or universal recipients. Type O is the universal donor as it has neither A nor B antigen on the red cells. Type O blood donors can donate blood to anyone. Type AB is the universal recipient type and can receive blood from all blood types.
People who have type O blood are universal donors, but not universal recipients. They can donate to anyone, but can only receive blood from another type O person. This is why type O blood is always in great demand by blood banks.
Nope. People with AB blood are universal recipients, which means they can get blood from any donor. People with blood type O are universal donors, they can give blood to people of all other blood types.
I assume you meant to ask "O- or O+", but it wouldn't allow the punctuation. O- (O-negative) is the universal donor.
AB blood types can receive blood from any donors, also known as "Universal Recipients". Your blood, however, can only be received by other AB types. To contrast, type O blood types can give blood to anyone, but can only receive type O blood.
There are 8 basic blood types, O+, A+, B+, AB+, O-, A-, B-, AB- . However these blood types are further broken down into 30 or so actual blood types. Some are categorized by antibodies (as in D) and these traits may be passed onto the recipient of a blood transfusion. Bone marrow donors blood type has been known to mutate the bone marrow recipients blood type into the donors type. Both the donor & the recipient may be of the same antigen blood type but the recipient may inherit antibodies as well as other characteristics of the donors specific blood type.
A person with A negative blood will form antibodies to Rh + and to B