You would give them A Rh Negative blood or you could also give them O Rh Negative as well. Group O is the universal donor so it can be given to anyone. If the patient is Rh Negative, they can only receive Rh Negative blood. If the patient was Rh positive, they can receive Rh positive or Rh negative.
Nothing, O negative blood is the universal donor. Everyone can receive it without complications.
Yes. They are compatible. Your doctor will give you injection of Anti D if you are having negative blood group and husband is having positive blood group. Injection is given within 72 hours of delivery if baby is having positive blood group.
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 classic blood typing into groups A, B, AB or O is only one way to divide up the population. Also whether you are rhesus negative or positive can play a big part. If you are type O but rhesus positive, your blood cannot be given to someone type O but rhesus negative or their immune system will react to the rhesus part of the donated blood.
Yes, parents with blood group O positive can have a child with blood group O negative. This is possible if one parent is heterozygous for the Rh factor (one parent has both positive and negative Rh alleles), allowing for the possibility of the child inheriting the negative Rh factor.
only "o negative" blood group person can be given to 'o negative' person
No
o negative
The universal transfusion blood donor type is the "O negative" blood type. The Rh factor (positive or negative) is as important as the ABO blood group. If you gave O positive blood to someone with Rh negative blood, it would cause problems, including the possibility of death.
Nothing, O negative blood is the universal donor. Everyone can receive it without complications.
Nope - O negative is the only group that can be safely given to the patient if their blood group is unknown.
yes
Having a rare blood group (such as AB negative) would make someone a rare blood donor.
If the blood type is not known, type O- is what would be used.
no
no
Yes. They are compatible. Your doctor will give you injection of Anti D if you are having negative blood group and husband is having positive blood group. Injection is given within 72 hours of delivery if baby is having positive blood group.