Hepatitis is a blood-borne disease, which means that it can be transmitted by exposure to the blood of someone who is infected. One of the most common means of transmission is contaminated needles, and (until the last few years) blood transfusions.
The blood collection and distribution system is now incomparably safer, since tests have been developed to screen infected blood, but it is much easier to exclude hepatitis patients from donating blood than it is to screen out infected blood and destroy it, and much safer. No system, and certainly no human being, is perfect, and there is always the chance of contaminated needles or equipment, and even of possibly allowing infected blood to pass scrutiny and be given to someone.
only if you are of the same blood type otherwise no you cant
The global answer is no, you can't donate blood for at least 6 months, in some places you cant donate for up to a year post piercing.
No, this patient can't donate blood, even if he is cured he/she can't donate blood until a period of 12 month from hiss last day of jaundice. This is because Liver in Jaundice patients is not working in anormal way, and the blood in those patients is poison with bilirubin, that's why they can't donate.
Because although most arteries do carry oxygenated blood, there is one exception - the pulmonary arteries. These take deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs so it can be reoxygenated. It is more accurate to say that arteries carry blood away from the heart.
you cant
cant carry a tune
because there body will reject it A universal donor's blood (O-negative) does not carry the antigens that cause rejection but other blood groups do carry the antigen that triggers the immune response. Read the link.
you cant sorry
High Hematocrit means that the person is unhealthy and suffering from any one of a number of medical conditions. It also means that the blood is more viscous than is required and can cause damage to the heart.
O blood has no major proteins that A and B blood have. For example: If someone had B blood with its specific proteins, this person cant receive A blood because it has the specific A blood proteins that will cause bad clotting to stop it. O blood (with no different proteins) wont affect any blood.
You can donate all your organs including eyes when you are alive.
The best way to get it out of the system is to stop using it. If you carry on using it, then you cant get it out of your system either.