Your Chxhealth report shows each biomarker, your result, the reference range used by our lab partner, and a short explanation. Here is how to read each section confidently.
The reference range
Reference ranges show the typical values for a healthy adult population. They are not 'normal' values for every individual — your optimal range may be tighter or different based on age, sex and clinical context. The range is a useful first reference, not a definitive 'good' or 'bad' line.
Out-of-range flags
Results outside the reference range are flagged. An out-of-range result is information, not a diagnosis. Chxhealth is a biomarker and genetic data provider. We do not diagnose, treat or prescribe. Our service supports your wellbeing journey alongside your healthcare professional. The report will note which markers warrant follow-up with a healthcare professional.
Reading hormones in context
Hormone results need cycle timing context for women, and morning timing context for men. The report records when the sample was taken. If you spotted timing issues, the result may not reflect your true baseline.
What if everything is in range but you feel unwell?
In-range biomarkers do not always mean nothing is wrong. Some conditions do not show on standard blood markers, or sit at borderline values. If you have persistent symptoms, see your GP for clinical assessment.
Frequently asked questions
Why does Chxhealth recommend showing the report to my GP?
Your GP knows your medical history, symptoms and clinical context. Out-of-range results benefit from clinical interpretation alongside the rest of your health picture.
Can I get a clinician interpretation from Chxhealth?
Not currently. Chxhealth provides the report. Clinical interpretation should come from your GP or specialist.
About this article. Educational content. Chxhealth is a biomarker and genetic data provider. We do not diagnose, treat or prescribe. Our service supports your wellbeing journey alongside your healthcare professional. For medical advice about your health or results, please speak to a qualified clinician.


