Everyone’s asking ChatGPT about their blood test results. And it’s genuinely useful — you paste in your numbers, it explains what they mean.
But there’s a fundamental problem: it forgets everything the moment you close the tab.
What ChatGPT does well
- Explains individual lab values in plain language
- Answers “is my ferritin of 32 normal?”
- Suggests follow-up questions for your doctor
- Available instantly, no setup
What it can’t do
- Remember your last result. Ask about your ferritin next month and it has no idea what it was before.
- Track trends. “Has my cholesterol been going up?” — it can’t answer because it doesn’t have your history.
- Connect symptoms to labs. You logged fatigue 4 times this week. Your ferritin dropped from 85 to 32 over 18 months. ChatGPT doesn’t see that pattern.
- Remind you. “Your last full panel was 9 months ago.” No push notifications.
- Export a PDF. Your doctor can’t read a ChatGPT conversation.
The irony
ChatGPT itself will tell you: “I recommend tracking these values over time and retesting in 3-6 months.” It knows it can’t do that. It’s suggesting you use a tool that can.
Try Bevita
Bevita combines structured health records with AI that actually understands your data — because it’s seen all of it, not just what you pasted in this conversation.
Free tier. Upload your first lab in 30 seconds.