Blood Tests
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Blood tests are the most common diagnostic tool in medicine. From a simple blood count to specialised hormone and genetic panels, the laboratory at St. Stephen’s Hospital handles the full range, with samples processed in our laboratory department on the same campus.
Reports are reviewed by qualified doctors and uploaded to the patient portal, usually on the same day.
A blood test involves taking a small sample of blood — typically from a vein in the arm. Depending on the test, the sample is collected into different tubes (different coloured caps for different tests) and processed in the laboratory.
Some tests use a fingerprick (such as point-of-care blood sugar). Most use a venous sample.
The blood draw itself is 2 to 5 minutes. Including registration and waiting, total time is usually2-3 hours. A 24-hour or timed collection takes longer to set up.
You sit comfortably while the phlebotomist cleans the inside of your elbow, tightens a band above it, and draws a sample using a thin needle. The needle is in for a few seconds.
Most people feel a brief sting. After the draw, you press a cotton wool ball on the site for a minute, and a small bandage is applied.
Most blood tests come with reference ranges next to each value. “In range” generally means normal for the population, but “normal” doesn’t always mean optimal for you — and vice versa.
Your doctor interprets results in the context of your symptoms, history, and other findings. If you are unsure, ask. We would rather you ask than misinterpret.
Most routine blood tests need 5 to 20 ml total — a few teaspoons. Even for many tests, the total amount taken is well within what your body easily replaces.
Yes. Tell us in advance. We can lie you down, distract you, and use the smallest needle possible. Most needle phobia gets easier once you know what to expect.
Different tests need blood mixed with different chemicals (anticoagulants, gel for clotting, etc.). Hence the different coloured caps. It looks like a lot — but the total volume is small.
Yes, with your written authorisation and a copy of your ID and payment receipt. We do not release reports without identification.
Phlebotomy — sample drawn from a vein, sometimes from a fingerprick