If your blood type is: | You can give to: | You can receive from: |
---|---|---|
O Positive | O+, A+, B+, AB+ | O+, O- |
A Positive | A+, AB+ | A+, A-, O+, O- |
B Positive | B+, AB+ | B+, B-, O+, O- |
AB Positive | AB+ Only | All Blood Types |
Learn More About Your Blood Type Compatibility Only 1 in 16 people have A negative blood. If you have A negative blood you can donate to anyone with a blood type of A or AB regardless of the positive or negative, however if you have A negative blood you can only receive A- or O- blood.
38% of the population has O positive blood, making it the most common blood type. O positive red blood cells are not universally compatible to all types, but they are compatible to any red blood cells that are positive (A+, B+, O+, AB+).
Although the blood type O+ can donate blood to all positive blood types (A+, B+, AB+, and O+), it is not a universal donor. Blood type O- is the universal blood donor, meaning that people with this blood type can donate blood to all other types with a lower risk of causing serious reactions.Jan 20, 2022
BLOOD TYPESBlood Type% of US PopulationYou Can Give toBlood TypeB-% of US Population2%You Can Give toB-, B+, AB-, AB+Blood TypeO+% of US Population38%You Can Give toO+, A+, B+, AB+Blood TypeO-% of US Population7%You Can Give toAll Blood TypesBlood TypeAB+% of US Population3%You Can Give toAB+4 more rows
O+ blood is very important as a (mostly) universal red blood cell type. This blood type can be used in emergency situations such as traumatic bleeding or other types of emergency transfusions. It is also an important blood type as type “O” patients can only receive type “O” red blood cell transfusions.Dec 1, 2021
Although the O-positive people can donate blood to people with any positive blood type, they can only receive blood from O positive and O negative (O−) people. Research suggests that people with blood group O have a lower risk of heart diseases and memory problems (including dementia) than the rest of the population.Jan 11, 2022
Who can receive O positive blood? Anyone with an Rh positive blood type can receive O positive red blood cells – so that's A positive, B positive and AB positive as well as O positive.
Rh null blood groupThe golden blood type or Rh null blood group contains no Rh antigens (proteins) on the red blood cells (RBCs). This is the rarest blood group in the world, with less than 50 individuals having this blood group.
Donors with blood type O... can donate to recipients with blood types A, B, AB and O (O is the universal donor: donors with O blood are compatible with any other blood type)
B positive is an important blood type for treating people with sickle cell disease and thalassemia who need regular transfusions. These conditions affect South Asian and Black communities where B positive blood is more common. There is currently a very high demand for B positive donations with the subtype Ro.
What are the rarest blood types?O positive: 35%O negative: 13%A positive: 30%A negative: 8%B positive: 8%B negative: 2%AB positive: 2%AB negative: 1%
To donate blood it is necessary to follow the rules of blood typing: Blood O+ can donate to A+, B+, AB+ and O+ Blood O- can donate to A+, A-, B+, B-, AB+, AB-, O+ and O- Blood A+ can donate to A+ and AB+Nov 22, 2016