Yes. The only requirement is for the blood collection facility to irradiate any cellular blood products prior to transfusion to prevent transfusion-associated Graft Versus Host Disease.
No - a pos can not donate blood to a negative
It depends what blood type of blood you have if you are not an o plus you can't do it
No. Someone who has B blood can only donate to someone with AB blood and B blood. Someone with O blood can only take O blood.
No although type O can donate to anyone the positive (plus) can not be put into a blood with negative. This would cause blood clumping and would be very bad.
It could be possible, but only if both the parents are heterozygous.If the mother is AO and the father is BO - there is a 25% chance the child will be OO (O blood group).However, if either or both of the parents are homozygous (AA or BB) - then they cannot have an O child.
Yes, it is possible for both mother and father to be RH positive and a child to be RH negative.
Yes. Both A and B are "dominant" genes, so if the parents have the genotype AO and BO, then there's a 1/4 chance the child will have genotype OO.
If Mr A Plus wants Mr B Minus to die, then sure. The blood types are NOT compatible.
A
No!
Yes. O is the universal donor. As long as the recipients RH Factor (positive or negative) is the same then O can donate to any blood type.
Yes, if both the father and mother have the genotype of AO, then they would both show up as phenotype A and they could have a child with type O blood. As O is recessive, the type A would be dominant and therefore show up as the blood type. The mother could contribute the positive Rh factor leading to type O+ in the child.