Deciphering Your Lab Report

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued a final rule in 2014 that allows patients or their representatives direct access to laboratory test reports after having their identities verified, without the need to have the tests sent to a health practitioner first. This rule is intended to empower you, to allow you to act as a partner with your healthcare provider and take a more active role in your healthcare decisions.

Easier access to test results, however, places you in a position of greater responsibility. You may encounter complex test results on lab reports and will need to recognize that there is a context in which providers use results to make treatment decisions. This may require that you educate yourself about your tests in order to understand their purpose and meaning. Testing.com and other credible sources of health information online can assist you in achieving a better understanding of your medical information.

Patients who want to can still get their test results from their health practitioners and patients should still look to them as the ultimate informed partner for understanding test results and providing treatment options. Testing.com encourages you to discuss your lab test results with your health practitioner, using this web site to help formulate your questions.

Once you receive or access your report from the laboratory, it may not be easy for you to read or understand, leaving you with more questions than answers. This article points out some of the different sections that may be found on a typical lab report and explains some of the information that may be found in those sections.

Sample Lab Reports

Different laboratories generate reports that can vary greatly in appearance and in the order and kind of information included. Below are some examples of what lab reports may look like. Select a sample report below to view or download it.

(Note: Pathology reports, such as for a biopsy, will look different than this sample lab report. The College of American Pathologists provides a resource: How to Read Your Pathology Report.)

Select to View or Download Sample Reports

Sample Cumulative Report

Image of Sample Lab Report

Sample CBC Report

Image of sample CBC report

Sample Urinalysis Report

Image of sample Urinalysis Report

Components of a Typical Lab Report

Despite the differences in format and presentation, all laboratory reports must contain certain elements as mandated by federal legislation known as the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA). (CLIA ’88 REGULATIONS, Section 493.1291; for more on regulation of laboratories, see Lab Oversight: A Building Block of Trust.) Your lab report may look very different than the sample report, but it will contain each of the elements required by CLIA. It may also contain additional items not specifically required but which the lab chooses to include to aid in the timely reporting, delivery, and interpretation of your results.

Some items included on lab reports deal with administrative or clerical information:

Other elements found on reports deal with the specimen that was collected and with the test itself:

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