Women's
48h
Results
8
Biomarkers
Women's Core
Health Panel
CLIA-Certified Lab
MD-Reviewed
At-Home Kit

Women's Health Panel

Women's Core
Health Panel

Essential biomarkers for a complete picture of your metabolic, cardiovascular, thyroid, and nutritional health — all in one simple at-home test.

Consultation
Included
With first order
Results
48 hrs
From lab receipt
Collection
At-Home
Tasso kit included
Women’s Core Health
Sale Price: $165.00 Original Price: $180.00

A foundational wellness panel for women, covering metabolic health, thyroid function, iron stores, and vitamin D levels. Ideal for annual checkups or anyone seeking a broad health overview.

Cholesterol • HDL • LDL (Calculated) • Triglycerides • HbA1c • TSH • Vitamin D • Ferritin

One-time purchase
No commitment
Free shipping included

CLIA Lab MD-Reviewed Free Shipping FSA/HSA Eligible

The Science Behind this Panel

Every woman deserves a clear, honest baseline of her health — not just a checkup that says "everything looks fine." This panel covers the eight markers that matter most for women's long-term energy, heart health, hormonal balance, and vitality.

Total cholesterol measures all the cholesterol circulating in your blood. For women, cardiovascular risk increases significantly after menopause as estrogen's protective effects diminish.

Why we included it: Heart disease is the number one killer of women — yet it's chronically underdiagnosed. Total cholesterol is the essential starting point for understanding your cardiovascular risk at any age.

HDL is your protective cholesterol — it removes harmful particles from artery walls and transports them back to the liver. Women naturally tend to have higher HDL than men, partly due to estrogen.

Why we included it: As estrogen declines with age, HDL often drops — increasing cardiovascular risk. Tracking HDL over time gives you an early warning of this shift before it becomes a problem.

LDL is the primary cholesterol particle that deposits into artery walls and drives plaque formation. Levels can shift significantly during hormonal transitions like perimenopause and menopause.

Why we included it: LDL often rises during hormonal changes in women — a pattern that's frequently missed because it's attributed to aging rather than recognized as a measurable, manageable risk.

Triglycerides are blood fats that rise in response to excess sugar, refined carbs, and metabolic stress. Elevated levels are a key marker of metabolic syndrome in women.

Why we included it: High triglycerides are actually a stronger predictor of heart disease in women than in men — making this a particularly important marker for female cardiovascular health.

HbA1c measures your average blood sugar over the past 2–3 months — the gold standard for detecting prediabetes and diabetes long before symptoms appear.

Why we included it: Women with diabetes face a disproportionately higher cardiovascular risk than men with the same condition. Catching blood sugar issues early is one of the highest-impact things you can do for your long-term health.

Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone (TSH) controls your thyroid's output — regulating your metabolism, energy, weight, mood, and body temperature. It's the primary screening marker for thyroid dysfunction.

Why we included it: Women are up to 8 times more likely than men to develop thyroid disease. It's one of the most common causes of fatigue, weight changes, and mood issues in women — and one of the most treatable once identified.

Vitamin D acts more like a hormone than a vitamin — it regulates calcium absorption, immune function, mood, and energy. Most people are deficient without knowing it.

Why we included it: Low vitamin D is linked to osteoporosis, depression, immune dysfunction, and fatigue — all conditions that disproportionately affect women. It's one of the easiest deficiencies to fix once you know about it.

Ferritin is the protein that stores iron in your body and the most sensitive early marker of iron deficiency — dropping long before a standard hemoglobin test would flag anything abnormal.

Why we included it: Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency in women worldwide, driven by menstruation, pregnancy, and diet. Low ferritin is behind countless cases of unexplained exhaustion that get dismissed or misdiagnosed.