The Rh Negative Blog

Are rh negative and rh positive people really different from each others?

If you have time to read through Worse Health Status and Higher Incidence of Health Disorders in Rhesus Negative Subjects, you will get a lot more details. Otherwise here are some of the major health disadvantages rh negative people have, seperated by male and female participants in our study:

Rh Negative Men

RhD negative men more often reported certain mental health disorders including panic disorders, antisocial personality disorders and attention deficits, ticks, fasciculation, thyroiditis, immunity disorders, allergies, especially skin allergies, excessive bleedings, anemia, osteoporosis, liver disease, infectious diseases and acute diarrhea diseases, while they less often reported gall bladder attacks, coeliac disease, maldigestion, malabsobtion, warts, some types of cancers and prostate hypertrophy.

Many of those could easily be connected to feeling out of place in society and high stress levels kicking in and taken their toll.

Rh Negative Women

RhD negative women reported more frequently psoriasis, constipation and diarrheas, ischemic diseases, type 2 diabetes, some types of cancers, lymphatic nodes swelling, vitamin B deficiency, thrombosis, tonsil stones, high sex desire, precocious puberty, urinary tract infections, scoliosis and they less often reported hearing loss, weight loss, hypoglycemia, glaucoma, fasciculation and warts.

Note: The term “high sex desire” refers to comparison to controls. This is a part of “keeping the species alive” and not a negative. There have been claims that one day rh negative blood would be extinct.

But this is not likely to happen as long as the natural turns are taken and our “species” fights the odds in every way that is possibly possible.