For coaches

Every client’s bloodwork, on one screen.

Stop scrolling screenshots in DMs. FullPanel reads each client’s panel in the context of their protocol, sorts your roster by who needs attention, and tracks every marker over time — privately, with consent.

See the roster demo →Plans & pricing
How FullPanel compares to GearCheck & spreadsheets →
01

Attention-sorted roster

Whoever's hematocrit just hit 56 sits at the top. Scores, flags, and last-draw dates across every client at a glance.

02

Context-aware reads

Athlete- and protocol-adjusted ranges, so you're not chasing false alarms on suppressed LH or training-elevated AST.

03

Private & consent-based

Clients link with revocable consent and share only what they choose. Built on the same anonymous-first foundation as the rest of FullPanel.

ROI

What it adds to your month

You already bill for bloodwork reviews. Branded reports in five minutes instead of an evening means you can do more of them. Move the sliders.

Review revenue / mo
$1,125
Plan cost / mo
–$99
Net added / mo
$1,026

The plan pays for itself at client #2 (2 reviews a month). Everything past that is margin.

Build your plan →See the roster demo

A note on scope

FullPanel gives you and your clients better information — it does not practice medicine or replace a physician. It never recommends or adjusts compounds or doses. You stay responsible for your coaching; we make the data legible.

FAQ

How do clients share their bloodwork with me?

Each client links their account to yours with explicit, revocable consent. You only see panels they've chosen to share, and they can disconnect at any time. Nothing is shared by default.

Does FullPanel give medical advice to my clients?

No. FullPanel is an educational analysis tool — it interprets markers in context and flags what to watch, but never recommends or adjusts any medication, compound, or dose. Coaching decisions remain yours and your client's responsibility.

Are the ranges adjusted for enhanced athletes?

Yes. Enhanced mode interprets markers against expectations for someone on exogenous hormones, so suppressed LH or supraphysiologic testosterone reads as context rather than a false alarm.

See it with a sample roster

Open the roster demo →