Doctor's Assessment Included
Every result includes a professional assessment from a BIG-registered doctor. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
Haemoglobin levels: what do they tell you about your blood?
Hemoglobin monitoring is particularly valuable for seniors, as age-related changes can affect red blood cell production and iron metabolism. Regular testing supports early detection of anemia, helping maintain energy, cognitive clarity, and quality of life.
Reference Ranges
Reference ranges may vary between laboratories. When you order a test, a BIG-registered doctor assesses your personal results in context. For treatment decisions, discuss your results with your GP.
What It Measures
Haemoglobin is almost always measured as part of a complete blood count, alongside haematocrit (the percentage of red blood cells in your blood), MCV (the size of red blood cells), and erythrocyte count. Together, these values provide a complete picture of your oxygen transport and the potential cause of anaemia.
Why It Matters
The most common cause is iron deficiency anaemia, especially in women with heavy menstrual bleeding. But anaemia can also indicate a vitamin B12 or folate deficiency, chronic diseases (kidney conditions, autoimmune diseases), gastrointestinal blood loss, or more rarely bone marrow disorders.
Too high haemoglobin (polycythaemia) occurs less frequently but is also relevant. It can occur with chronic lung diseases, smoking, dehydration, or the bone marrow disorder polycythaemia vera. High haemoglobin makes the blood thicker and increases the risk of thrombosis.
When to Test
With a known chronic disease (kidney problems, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease), haemoglobin is regularly measured as these conditions can cause anaemia. During pregnancy, Hb monitoring is standard.
Fasting is not required for a haemoglobin test.
Symptoms
Low Levels
High Levels
Lifestyle Tips
For high haemoglobin, stopping smoking is the most important measure if it is the cause. Adequate hydration prevents dehydration from artificially raising haemoglobin. For polycythaemia vera, phlebotomy is the standard treatment.