Your entitled to see your blood test results under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the Data Protection Act 2018, the only exception to this is if the doctor believes it would cause serious physical or mental harm to the patient. It's causing me more not to be able to see the results. You're also able to make a SAR to obtain anything held on your medical records, however, this ties people up with weeks upon weeks of paperwork which is not helpful for a NHS already going under.
The surgery had no problem with issuing me with pages of my previous blood test results at the start of this year.
I asked the colorectal surgeon if I could have some of the iron tablets previously issued to me back in 2016 when I last had anaemia and he said that the GP would have to prescribe them. The same GP who hasn't mentioned anaemia, even when he phoned me following the mid-August blood test. I have no confidence in him at the moment because of this. Back in 2016 and the prior years nobody mentioned me having anaemia, until my ferritin level hit 8 and I felt like I was seriously ill. It shouldn't come to this, surely.
I will be telling the doctor about the OTC iron and also explaining why, my lack of confidence given this was only mentioned again by the surgeon and the fact that I have had to request these blood tests as opposed to the doctor suggesting they need to be done (my doctors are funny - you phone the receptionist and say you'd like your cholesterol, for example, checked and they go away ask the doctor and then you get a text message to say the doctor has agreed or declined). My total cholesterol had dropped from 5.33 in Dec 2023 to 4.5 in Feb 2025 and I was told by the wellbeing clinician to 'keep doing whatever you are doing' as it was coming down. I have changed my diet a bit since though, so wanted to check that it hadn't adversely affected my cholesterol.
I will keep you posted.