Glamour. “As a Board-Certified internal medicine physician, I would highly recommend against anyone consuming human blood,” says Dr.
Brooke Williams, an osteopath and co-founder of the non-profit . , a Seattle-based pediatrician who answers teen health questions for her 1.5 million followers on TikTok, adds, “As far as drinking someone’s blood, it’s overall not advised." If you ever want to feel intense shame, try calling doctors during the pandemic and demanding that they weigh in on Megan Fox and Machine Gun Kelly drinking blood. (Nevertheless, they were all extremely kind and helpful.) “There are a variety of reasons for why it’s not safe to drink other people’s blood," says Jain. "Number one, you don’t know if the other person has a blood-born pathogen or an infection in their blood.
So drinking someone else’s blood that hasn’t been screened for those types of infections could potentially put you at risk for contracting one of those infections.” But imagine this: I am a world-famous musician with a gun-based name and a lot of time on my hands.
I pay for blood screening. Now, may I throw back some of my lover's sweet, sweet O-negative? No! The doctors agree, in chorus. “Blood is rich in iron and over consumption of iron can lead to a condition called hemochromatosis, a.k.a.
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