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Essential Health Panel

What Does the Essential Health Panel Check?

The Essential Health Panel is designed for people who want a focused overview without a very large panel. It checks iron status, kidney function and liver function, giving you a structured overview of the areas most relevant to this profile. Rather than relying on symptoms alone, the test helps identify measurable markers that may explain how you feel or highlight areas worth monitoring.

This type of testing can be useful when you want a clearer baseline, want to investigate ongoing symptoms, or want to take action before problems become more difficult to manage. Your results should always be interpreted in context, and abnormal findings should be discussed with an appropriate healthcare professional.

Key areas checked:

Iron status

This section includes Ferritin, Iron, TIBC, Transferrin saturation, UIBC. These markers help provide insight into iron status and may show whether results are within the expected range.

Kidney function

This section includes Creatinine, eGFR, Urea. These markers help provide insight into kidney function and may show whether results are within the expected range.

Liver function

This section includes ALT, Albumin, ALP, AST, Bilirubin, Gamma GT, Globulin, Total protein. These markers help provide insight into liver function and may show whether results are within the expected range.

Cholesterol and heart health

This section includes Total cholesterol, HDL, HDL percentage, LDL, Non-HDL cholesterol, Triglycerides. These markers help provide insight into cholesterol and heart health and may show whether results are within the expected range.

Blood sugar and metabolism

This section includes Random glucose, Uric acid. These markers help provide insight into blood sugar and metabolism and may show whether results are within the expected range.

Who is this useful for?

The Essential Health Panel may be useful for people who want a focused overview without a very large panel. It is intended to support better understanding, early awareness and more informed next steps.

What happens after the test?

You receive a clear report with doctor-reviewed interpretation. The aim is to make your results easier to understand, highlight anything that may need attention, and help you decide whether lifestyle changes, monitoring or further medical advice may be appropriate.