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.
If both parents are O negative, their child will also be O negative. This is because O negative is a recessive blood type that requires both parents to contribute an O negative allele for the child to have O negative blood type.
For two parents to have a child with type O negative blood group, both parents must have at least one O and one negative Rh factor allele. The possible parental blood group combinations could be O negative x O negative, O negative x O positive, A negative x O negative, or B negative x O negative.
The negative in "O Negative" means that it's Rh negative, meaning that anyone, either positive or negative can receive that Rh type. O negative blood can be given to anyone. It's the Universal Donor.
People with O negative blood are often referred to as "universal donors" because their blood can be transfused to patients with any blood type. Therefore, anyone can donate O negative blood to individuals in need, regardless of their own blood type.
O positive blood type can be transfused to individuals with O positive and O negative blood types. It is considered a universal donor for Rh positive blood types, but is not suitable for those with Rh negative blood type.
Obviously, the child's blood type would be an O negative as well.
O negative blood type can take only from O negative. but in emergency cases if the O negative is not available, doctors give you O positive, and treat that with immune-suppressants.
If both parents are O negative, their child will also be O negative. This is because O negative is a recessive blood type that requires both parents to contribute an O negative allele for the child to have O negative blood type.
For two parents to have a child with type O negative blood group, both parents must have at least one O and one negative Rh factor allele. The possible parental blood group combinations could be O negative x O negative, O negative x O positive, A negative x O negative, or B negative x O negative.
yes it can be possible too as the parents is already with an o blood group..
The negative in "O Negative" means that it's Rh negative, meaning that anyone, either positive or negative can receive that Rh type. O negative blood can be given to anyone. It's the Universal Donor.
only "o negative" blood group person can be given to 'o negative' person
O negative is the universal donor. This means that anyone can have a transfusion of O neg, despite their blood type.
yes
Consideration must be given to whether or not the person is Rh positive or Rh negative. A person with blood type A positivecan receive A positive, A negative, O positiveand O negative blood. A person with A negative blood can only receive A negative and O negative blood.
Yes, O negative blood is the universal donor, so if you're B positive or have any other blood type, you can receive O negative blood.
yes.