Blood type O- is the one that can be giving to anybody
AB+ is the Blood type that can take any blood from another person, where as;
O- is the Blood type that can give blood to any person
O- is considered the universal donor. It has no antigens, so none of the other blood types will resist it.
None- although at one time type O negative was considered to be a universal blood donor type. We have since learned that is not always true.
Blood type O is a universal donor.
Type 'O' is the 'universal' blood group.
type A
You can donate you any blood type, but only accept type O- blood
No, they only can donate to blood types A, and AB.
Absolutely not. Anyone who has on any type of medication cannot donate blood.
If you have type o negative then you are the universal donor and could donate to any other blood type. If you have o positive then you would be limited in what blood types you could donate to.
Blood type AB can only donate to another AB type. Blood type O+ can be given to anyone, but a blood type like A or B or AB can only be donated to a person who has the same exact blood type as the person who is donating their blood.
A, or AB
A person with type o blood is a universal donor and can donate blood to persons of any blood type.
No, to donate blood safely the donor and the recipient have to have the same blood type.
AB blood has no antibodies to the antigens found on any type of blood, and therefore (as long as the rhesus factors allow) can receive any blood type, B included.
To find out your blood type you will need to either: A) donate blood and receive a donor's card or B) get a blood typing test.As far as the universal blood type goes type AB positive can donate plasma to any blood type, but O is considered the "universal donor" because it can give red blood cells to any type.
There is no "best blood type" just more rare or flexible.For example, blood type O negative can donate red blood cells to any type, while blood type AB positive can donate plasma to any type.The most common blood type is O positive.There is a high demand for any and all blood types because the need for transfusions is so high. So everyone who is eligible should donate not just those with really rare blood types.
A person with Type O can donate to any other blood type, but can only receive blood from another Type O person. A person having blood group O (with absence of Rh-factor) only can donate his blood to any other individual. Rh or Antigen-D is a factor which decides the positivity or negativity of the blood, so the blood group O-negative is considered the universal donor, as it does not effect any of other blood groups.