Snap your bloodwork. Let Luna read it.
Heaven Health turns your blood test panel into plain English in about a minute. Every marker explained, in context. A 30-day plan around what matters. A list of questions to bring to your clinician. Free, private, and built into the app.
The problem with most blood tests
You get a panel back. There are forty markers on it. Eight of them are flagged. The flags are calibrated for "outside normal" — not "outside optimal." The reference ranges are populations, not you. The lab provides one sentence of context per flag, and the sentence is usually "consult your doctor." Two weeks later you forget it exists.
The Heaven Health blood test reading is built to fix that quietly. You photograph the panel inside the app, Luna reads every marker, translates each into a paragraph of context — what it is, what the ranges mean, what the current evidence says about optimal — and turns the picture into a thirty-day response plan. The whole thing takes about a minute.
Heaven Health's blood test reading is a translation and wellness tool. It is not a clinical interpretation. It does not diagnose, prescribe or replace your doctor. If any marker requires medical attention, Luna will say so explicitly and produce a list of questions for your next clinical appointment. The reading is built to make you a better-informed patient, not to replace the clinician.
How it works
- Open the Blood Test screen in the app. It is one tap from the home screen.
- Photograph or upload your panel. Any provider — your GP, a hospital, Function Health, InsideTracker, Lifeforce, a private order. Photos or PDFs both work. Multiple pages, no problem.
- Luna extracts every marker. About thirty to sixty seconds. The vision model handles tables, columns, lab letterheads, multiple pages.
- Read the plain-English summary. Each marker gets its value, the lab's reference range, an "optimal" range where the longevity literature has one, and a paragraph of what it means.
- See your 30-day plan. Luna picks the three or four markers most worth working on this month, drafts the food, movement, sleep and supplement levers from the literature, and writes the questions to take to your clinician.
The markers Heaven Health understands
Luna handles every common marker on the panels you are likely to be tested for. A non-exhaustive list:
| Category | Markers Luna reads |
|---|---|
| Lipids | ApoB, LDL-C, HDL-C, triglycerides, Lp(a), non-HDL, total cholesterol |
| Glucose & insulin | Fasting glucose, fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, HbA1c, c-peptide |
| Inflammation | hs-CRP, ESR, ferritin (as inflammation marker), homocysteine |
| Iron status | Ferritin, serum iron, TIBC, transferrin saturation |
| Vitamins & minerals | Vitamin D (25-OH), B12, folate, magnesium, zinc, selenium |
| Thyroid | TSH, free T3, free T4, reverse T3, anti-TPO, anti-TG |
| Hormones | Testosterone (total & free), DHEA-S, oestradiol, progesterone, SHBG, cortisol |
| Full blood count | RBC, Hb, MCV, MCH, MCHC, RDW, WBC, neutrophils, lymphocytes, platelets |
| Liver | ALT, AST, GGT, ALP, bilirubin, albumin |
| Kidney | Creatinine, eGFR, urea, uric acid |
| Other | Vitamin B6, folate (RBC), copper, lipid subfractions, IGF-1, omega-3 index |
If your panel includes a marker not on this list, Luna still extracts it and explains what it is in general terms — even if Heaven Health does not yet have a curated reference range for it. We expand the curated set every release.
What "plain English" looks like
An example, lightly edited from a real Luna output (anonymised):
"Your ApoB came in at 102 mg/dL. The lab's reference range is <120 so they did not flag it. The longevity literature increasingly points to sub-80 as the optimal target — the lower-is-better camp. Your LDL is 138 mg/dL. The pattern says cardiovascular risk that is worth managing, not panicking about. The three levers with the best evidence: more soluble fibre (oats, beans, ground flax), more brisk movement (you are at 6,000 steps a day average — the data favours 8,000+ for ApoB), and reducing saturated fat from butter and red meat. I'll put these into your daily plan starting tomorrow. Worth asking your doctor about: whether they would consider a CAC scan given your family history."
That is the tone. Honest, specific, with a lever, a number, and a question for the clinician. No hype, no panic.
The 30-day response plan
After Luna reads the panel she does not just list the markers. She picks the three or four that are most worth working on this month and builds a plan around them.
The plan includes:
- Food levers. Specific foods to add or reduce, with portion guidance. Drawn from the peer-reviewed nutrition literature, not from a wellness blog.
- Movement levers. Zone-2 cardio dose, strength volume, walking targets, calibrated to the markers.
- Sleep targets. If sleep is contributing (it often is), the plan includes a sleep target and a wind-down protocol.
- Supplement guidance. Specific supplements where the evidence is strong (omega-3 for triglycerides, vitamin D for deficiency, magnesium glycinate for low magnesium and sleep). Luna does not push supplements where the evidence is weak.
- Questions for your clinician. A clean list, formatted as a one-page PDF you can email yourself or share.
At day thirty the plan reminds you to get a follow-up panel if you can, and Luna will read the new one and compare side by side. The before-and-after is where the motivation lives.
Where the AI reading shines (and where it doesn't)
It shines at:
- Translating jargon into plain language without dumbing the content down
- Putting "normal" markers in context — flagging optimal ranges the lab does not
- Tracking change over time across multiple panels
- Connecting the bloodwork to your daily plan, your Heaven Score and your biological-age estimate
- Producing a clean list of questions for your clinician
- Reading panels from any provider, any lab, any country
It does not do:
- Diagnose disease
- Prescribe medication
- Replace your clinician's judgement
- Interpret rare or specialised tests outside its training (we tell you when we are unsure)
- Read panels that are too blurred to OCR (you will get a "please rephotograph" prompt)
How Heaven Health is different from Function Health or InsideTracker
Function Health and InsideTracker offer their own panels with their own interpretation. Both are excellent products. Heaven Health is different in two ways.
First, we do not sell the panel. We read the panel you already have, from any provider, anywhere in the world. That makes the cost difference large — a Function Health membership runs hundreds of dollars a year; Heaven Health is free.
Second, the reading lives inside a daily coach. Function Health gives you a quarterly report. Luna integrates the bloodwork into your daily plan, your Heaven Score, and your biological-age estimate every day. The bloodwork is not a one-off — it is one input among several, weighted appropriately, refreshed automatically.
If you are already a Function Health or InsideTracker member, brilliant — upload the report and let Luna build the daily plan around it.
Privacy of your bloodwork
Your blood test data is among the most sensitive personal information you own. We treat it that way.
- Encrypted in transit (TLS 1.3) and at rest
- Never sold, never shared with advertisers, never used to train third-party advertising models
- Stored in your private user-scoped record only
- Deletable in two taps from the in-app account screen
- Exportable as a doctor-ready PDF whenever you want
What the doctor-ready PDF looks like
If you want to take Heaven Health's reading to your clinician, tap "Export PDF" on any blood test reading. Luna produces a clean two-to-four-page document: your markers, the trends across panels you have uploaded, the lifestyle levers you are using, and the questions she has surfaced for the clinician. It is designed to make a fifteen-minute appointment substantially more productive.
Languages
Luna reads bloodwork in twenty languages. She handles reports printed in English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Dutch, Portuguese, Japanese, Korean, Chinese (Simplified and Traditional), Hindi, Arabic, Russian, Turkish, Polish, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish and Finnish. The reading and the response plan are returned in your chosen language.
Blood test AI — FAQ
What panels can I upload?
Any panel from any provider — your GP, a hospital, Function Health, InsideTracker, Lifeforce, Superpower, a private lab in your country. Photos or PDFs. Single page or many.
Does the AI replace my doctor?
No. The reading is a translation and a wellness tool. It does not diagnose or prescribe. If any marker warrants clinical attention, Luna says so explicitly and produces a list of questions to bring to your clinician.
How accurate is the marker extraction?
For standard panels with clear printing, extraction accuracy is high. For poor photos, handwritten reports, or unusual lab formats, accuracy drops. Luna will tell you when she is unsure about a value and ask you to confirm.
What if my marker is "in range" but flagged in the AI reading?
That is the most useful thing the reading does. "Normal" lab ranges are calibrated for the general population, not the longevity-optimised individual. Many markers — ApoB, fasting insulin, ferritin in women, HbA1c — have research-supported optimal ranges tighter than the lab's reference. Luna will explain when and why.
Is the reading available offline?
No — the reading requires a network connection because Luna processes the panel through the research engine. Once read, the result is stored locally and viewable offline.
How is my bloodwork data used?
Only for your reading and your daily plan. It is encrypted, never sold, never shared with advertisers, never used to train third-party AI models. You can delete it from the app in two taps.
Snap your panel. See it in plain English.
Free on iOS, Android, macOS, iPad and Vision OS. Available in 20 languages.