Whats The Point In Buying And Owning A...
Property1 min ago
After reading a post in a previous question i have worried myself, some one posted that being A rhesus negative can affect the effectiveness of the contraceptive pill? Does any one know any more on this subject?
I have only recently found out my blood type after giving blood but now after reading this i am worried that my pill may not be working as it should be?
Can any one help to put my mind at rest or give me some advice?
No best answer has yet been selected by Gemma1984. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi Gemma.
Your rhesus status is separate from your blood group, no matter what blood group you have you can be either rhesus negative or positive. About 42% of English people have blood group A. The proportion of people with rhesus negative is 85%. I can't find any stats on how many are A rhesus negative but at a guess it is 85% of 42% which is about 38% of the population (21 million or about 10 million women).
I have had a quick search online and also on various medical literature databases I have access to, and it came up with no articles having anything to do with any problems. Considering how many women are on the pill and how many are A-negative, there would definitely be information on it and we would all be told about it when we first started using it.
Don't worry. I have no idea where Hectic got his/her information but I'm sure it is not correct.
Gemma if you want to know more about what Greenspirit was talking about, rhesus negativity in pregnancy, then have a look at
http://www.babycentre.co.uk/refcap/1480.html
however notice this doesn't have anything to do with the contraceptive pill.
Also just realised I got my sums a little wrong, 85% are rhesus POSITIVE. However it still ends up that millions of women are A Rh Negative so my argument still holds!
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