One can donate to LifeSource by making a charitable donation of blood. One can learn the location of different places to donate through looking at the maps for the donation centers. One can donate blood every so often number of days depending on donation type.
The O blood type is known as the universal donor, but there is one catch the Rh factor, people who are O - (people who don't have the Rh factor) can donate to anyone, but if the person if O+, then they can donate to anyone who is Rh +, so yes there could be a problem depending on the Rh factor.
NO!!!!!
No. Someone who has B blood can only donate to someone with AB blood and B blood. Someone with O blood can only take O blood.
1 pint at a time
Typically, you can donate one pint of blood in one donation session. It is not recommended to donate more than one pint of blood in a single day to ensure the donor's safety and well-being.
No. FDA guidelines allow whole blood to be donated every 56 days. Platelets may be collected twice a week, up to 24 times a year, and plasma may be collected twice a week (as long as total protein and immunoglobulin levels remain acceptable).
For whole blood, one can donate every 56 days. However, different waiting periods apply to different types of donations.Platelets can be donated every 7 days, up to 24 times a yearPlasma can be donated every 28 days, up to 13 times per year
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.
You would have to wait until your symptoms have cleared before you can donate blood. Even if a cold is not a major illness, blood centers wait until the individual is perfectly healthy to donate as blood is a very delicate and perishable fluid. Most blood centers will have guidelines that help determine if an individual is eligible to donate blood.
Yes - blood type O or B are the only possibilities. Each parent donates one allele to the child. The parent with blood type O must donate an O. The parent with blood type be will donate either a B or an O - they can only donate an O if they are heterozygous, BO.
Yes. Living in Scotland at anytime is not one of the things that will stop you giving blood.