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Text Analysis & GenerationHealthExplanation

Blood Test Explainer (Non-Diagnostic)

Explain blood test results using provided ranges; classify markers, summarize findings, advise when to seek care, include clinician questions, and keep guidance educational only (non-diagnostic).

Prompt Content

Explain these blood test results clearly for a layperson, covering what each marker shows, potential concerns, and when to seek medical advice (educational only, not a diagnosis). Inputs: • Results: <test-results> Test Results </test-results> • User context: <user-context> User Context </user-context> Steps: 1) Use the provided reference ranges and units exactly; do not infer missing values. List any missing or inconsistent ranges/units before analysis. 2) Classify each marker as Within range, Borderline (within 5% of a limit), High, or Low. 3) Produce the following sections in order: SUMMARY KEY FLAGS MARKER-BY-MARKER WHEN TO SEEK MEDICAL ADVICE QUESTIONS FOR YOUR CLINICIAN NOTES AND NEXT STEPS 4) For each marker, write at most 3 short sentences: what it measures; what this result may suggest for general health (non-diagnostic); brief practical context (e.g., fasting, hydration, timing, common causes) if relevant. Constraints: • Educational only; do not diagnose, prescribe, or suggest dosing. • Do not override the lab's reference ranges; flag concerns instead. • Avoid certainty language; use may/can; tie advice to context. • Plain language; define any jargon briefly in parentheses. • No external links; no speculation beyond the data provided. Under MARKER-BY-MARKER, format each item like: <example> Marker name: value unit (ref: low-high) - Category • What it measures: one short sentence. • What this result may suggest: 1-2 concise, non-diagnostic points. • Context notes: relevant factors (e.g., fasting, dehydration, recent illness, medications). </example> WHEN TO SEEK MEDICAL ADVICE should include: • Any High/Low markers, especially if far from range or with symptoms. • New or worsening symptoms, pregnancy, significant medical history, or medication interactions. • Persistent abnormalities on repeat testing. • Urgent care if severe symptoms are present (e.g., chest pain, severe shortness of breath, fainting, confusion, uncontrolled bleeding). If the input is incomplete or ambiguous, start with a brief clarification list, then continue with best-effort explanations.

Variables

Test Results
Paste your lab results with values and the lab's reference ranges and units exactly as reported.
Example: Hemoglobin: 13.2 g/dL (ref 12.0-15.5) WBC: 11.2 x10^9/L (ref 4.0-10.0) Platelets: 240 x10^9/L (ref 150-400) ALT: 62 U/L (ref 7-56) TSH: 4.8 mIU/L (ref 0.4-4.0)
User Context
Age, sex, pregnancy status; relevant symptoms, conditions, medications/supplements; fasting status and test timing. If unknown, write N/A.
Example: 34-year-old female; not pregnant; fasting 12h; symptoms: fatigue; conditions: hypothyroidism; meds: levothyroxine 75 mcg; test taken 8:15 AM.