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A 2009 Boston study confirmed findings from several decades earlier which suggested a blood type - malignancy risk association, whereby the chances of developing pancreatic cancer for instance were 32% higher for those with Type A blood, 51% greater for Type A-B, and 72% higher for Type B blood.
Types O and B also have greater susceptibility to infectious diseases such as scarlet fever, cholera, typhoid, or the bubonic plague, while Type A shows greater susceptibility to the smallpox virus, and it is more prone to blood clotting. Blood-sucking insects (that carry diseases) prefer Type O blood.
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