Hi. I have used medichecks for 7 years. Blood prick tests are easy to do and I’m not great with that sort of thing normally. I find them accurate as well, finger pricks for other hormones aren’t necessarily but for thyroid it is and my symptoms always correspond with the blood test results.
Your TSH, although not a good diagnostic tool, is actually too high and itself indicates hypothyroidism. The NHS I’m afraid is hopeless with thyroid care too, very outdated and also limited in medication choices. I would not advise using NHS for thyroid care personally. If it is possible, at the moment in the uk private care is far superior in this area and the NHS is not treating thyroid issues appropriately.
You want a full thyroid hormone panel that checks everything, Medi has a comprehensive one for around £80-100. They have an extra one that tests some vitamins and minerals along with hormones. That’s good to check vit D, B12 and others that are massively affected if you have a thyroid issue due to absorption issues. Once you have results you can post them in this thread, I’m good at reading them and can help you understand your situation if you like. Being in range for any hormone isn’t the only thing to look at, there are optimal levels for all of them. A normal TSH is actually 1. Your Free T3 should be in the upper quarter of the range and free T4 midway or above. I feel best when it’s exactly midway with my T3 just in the upper quarter but no higher. It’s taken years for me to understand this about myself and what dosage gets me there.