I do still have parismia (?) for over a year now where certain foods taste and smell “off” but feel it’s better then it used to be although still complaining from time to time. I did get covid Christmas 2020 and was the sickest I’ve ever been but I did not have to go to the hospital. I am rh negative for sure as it runs in my family on my moms side. I am rh negative.I believe o but I did an Eldon test myself so could be wrong. O and Rh-negative blood types may already have COVID-19 antibodies. Michael’s Hospital, suggested that people with these more resistant blood types may have already developed antibodies that can recognize certain aspects of the novel coronavirus and are therefore better prepared to fight it off”. Here is the “source” that failed to source : The American Red Cross reports that 8 percent of white Americans, 4 percent of African-Americans, 4 percent of Latinx-Americans, and 1 percent of Asian-Americans are O-negative. Unfortunately, this is a much more rare blood type. “Rh− blood type was protective against SARS-CoV-2 infection, especially for those who were O-negative,” they wrote. If a patient was O-negative, they were particularly protected from the novel coronavirus, the authors noted. Additionally, “Rh− had a lower of severe COVID-19 illness or death.”
“An Rh− status seemed protective against SARS-CoV-2 infection,” the study authors wrote. When the researchers looked at this second classification, there was further good news-people in any blood group which is Rh-negative are also “somewhat protected” from the virus. Those four main blood groups-A, AB, B, and O-can be Rh-positive or Rh-negative, meaning that there are 8 blood groups in total. Negative blood types are also somewhat protected from the virus. Months after I first pointed it out, the mainstream media begins to pick up on what our readers have known: Those who are O-negative may be the least likely to get COVID. Clarifications: COVID-19 and Rh negative blood types