Blood type interrogate?
Also if you would have ne entry would they tell you that you can not donate blood any more?
Answers:
I'm wondering if I am getting my interval!?
They check your blood type (or rather the blood you donate) at tiniest 3x before it is given to the receiver.
The red cross will tell you if they find something in your blood that means- you are sick or you cannot donate any longer...
roughly speaking they put on the CARD- what you told them, but when you blood is donated they check the type and say might in actuality be A+, they will change it on the blood paper, without shifting it on your record
my friend- thought she was O- most of her family unit is
told that to the red x, they gave her a card beside it
we tested it in anatomy class and she certainly is A+. they ahve her ion the system as the worng blood type, bc she told them that blood type, but her blood is not beign given to people on that assumption- they will cross amtch it earlier it gets to a merciful.
you cannot doante blood if:
you lived in the UK for more than 6months within the 1980s-90s
are pregnant
have a heart condition
hold a blood borne disease
are recovering from illness
take in no doubt medications
have lately had surgery or cancer...
im australian so ours are probably different from where on earth you live... a full list can be found at your countries red cross site.
I am have a gas trouble these days?
They other check your blood type, and never would take anybody's word for it. There is no problem, if you dont know your blood type, as they will check it anyway.What are the reason for females to start spotting?
they check your blood type when you donate to make sure that you hold put down the right blood type so that they dont give it to someone else next to a different blood type.yes they would certainly relay you if you couldnt donate blood
so dont worry
your a good character for donate blood you can help up to 3 citizens with one donation
Can a gyn speak about from the exam.?
I know what u are talking in the order of. I didn't know my blood type until I was 17 years infirm. I gave blood and they told me. I go home and asked my mom and she said she didn't know b/c they never told her when I was born. So I assumed that I be that type. I went to the dr almost a few years later and be asked my blood type I told him that Red Cross told me what it was and I wasn't sure if it was my blood type. Dr did the assessment and came pay for and told me that they were right. The Red Cross will other be right when they tell u ur blood type. Also to answer your cross-examine if they would tell you if u can't donate blood anymore. Yes they would describe you. They test your blood after they bestow that is why they bring a few little test tubes of blood from you since u start ur pint of blood.Please donate blood its a good wreak and two u have a rareblood type that will backing alot of people. O denial and postive can give to anyone.
Hope that help.
they check it thats why they put that on the top of your card, you cant donate if you have aids, if you hold been to a tropical country lately, if you hold herpes, or if you have several other blood born infections. also if you are underweight they will not tolerate you donate till you gain weight.
The Red Cross Blood Bank always test you blood group each time you offer blood. That is one of the 20 plus tests that are done following the actual donation -- blood type, red blood count (both back you give blood and also later), infections and STDs. That is what the an assortment of small test tubes are for prior to giving blood. Also, as mentioned, they tryout your red blood count which must be above 11.0 for women and 12.5 for males,
If you have any grounds for not being competent to give blood, they may give an account you prior to a donation, or if they have found an infection after you own donated that would eliminate you from donating, they would contact you by communiqu?? and ask that you come into their head department for an interview and tell you surrounded by person and may bestow you a referral to your GP.