HbA1c test in The Lakes, read by a doctor.
If you live or work in The Lakes, getting a properly interpreted HbA1c is more useful than running a 100-panel screen no one explains. HbA1c reflects your average blood glucose over the previous 2–3 months by measuring how much glucose is attached to haemoglobin in your red blood cells.
What HbA1c actually tells us
HbA1c reflects your average blood glucose over the previous 2–3 months by measuring how much glucose is attached to haemoglobin in your red blood cells.
Your British GP interprets HbA1c alongside fasting glucose, insulin, HOMA-IR, lipids, ALT/GGT, blood pressure and waist circumference — not in isolation. We classify your metabolic phenotype and build a personalised plan rather than only chasing a number.
High HbA1c
An HbA1c of 42–47 mmol/mol (6.0–6.4%) indicates prediabetes. ≥48 mmol/mol (6.5%) confirms diabetes. Even high-normal values (38–41) are linked to higher cardiovascular risk.
Low HbA1c
Unusually low HbA1c may reflect anaemia, recent blood loss, haemoglobinopathy, or rarely a glucose-lowering medication mismatch.
Symptoms we ask about
- • Increased thirst
- • Frequent urination
- • Persistent fatigue
- • Blurred vision
- • Slow-healing cuts
- • Recurrent thrush or skin infections
- • Unintentional weight change
Risk factors
- • South Asian, Arab or Middle Eastern ethnicity
- • Family history of diabetes
- • Overweight or central adiposity
- • Sedentary lifestyle
- • Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)
- • Gestational diabetes history
- • Sleep apnoea
- • Chronic stress
Conditions linked
- • Type 2 diabetes
- • Prediabetes
- • Metabolic syndrome
- • Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
- • Cardiovascular disease
- • Diabetic kidney disease
- • PCOS
Lifestyle that moves the needle
- • Mediterranean or lower-carbohydrate dietary pattern
- • 150+ minutes of moderate aerobic activity weekly
- • Two resistance training sessions weekly
- • Sleep 7–8 hours, treat sleep apnoea
- • 10,000 daily steps where feasible
- • Stress reduction and alcohol moderation
Further tests we may run
- • Fasting insulin & HOMA-IR
- • Oral glucose tolerance test where indicated
- • Continuous glucose monitor (CGM) trial
- • Liver function & ultrasound for fatty liver
- • Urine ACR for early kidney involvement
- • ECG and ApoB for cardiovascular risk
Treatments where indicated
- • Structured lifestyle programme (first-line)
- • Metformin where appropriate
- • SGLT2 inhibitors / GLP-1 receptor agonists for cardiometabolic protection
- • Referral to diabetologist for complex cases
Retest: Every 3 months if abnormal or actively treated. Annually for routine longevity screening once optimised.
Questions from The Lakes patients
How do I book a HbA1c test in The Lakes?
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WhatsApp us or call +971 4 566 1486. We confirm a nurse slot for The Lakes — most patients are seen within 60–90 minutes — and the GP call is included.
How much does HbA1c cost in The Lakes?
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Standalone HbA1c is typically AED 150–350 depending on the panel. We bundle it free into our Comprehensive Health Checks (AED 1,500 men / 1,800 women) and our Unlimited Bloods membership.
What does an abnormal HbA1c mean for me?
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That's exactly the conversation you'll have with the GP. Your British GP interprets HbA1c alongside fasting glucose, insulin, HOMA-IR, lipids, ALT/GGT, blood pressure and waist circumference — not in isolation. We classify your metabolic phenotype and build a personalised plan rather than only chasing a number.
Is the GP a real doctor?
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Yes — GMC-registered, British-trained. The same doctor who reads your HbA1c is the one who phones you in The Lakes.
Will my employer or insurer see the result?
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We don't share with employers or insurers. As a DHA-licensed clinic we upload to NABIDH; other DHA-connected providers can technically access your record.
Healthcare should feel simple.
Send an enquiry and our team will come back to you — no waiting rooms, no run-around.