Privacy

Your labs are nobody’s business.

People avoid getting bloodwork interpreted because they don’t want it on a record, in a chat history, or in front of a doctor asking questions. FullPanel is built so that fear never applies.

No name, no email to use it

Using the analyzer requires no account and no email. We never need to know who you are to read your bloodwork.

Processed in memory, then discarded

When you analyze a panel, it's read in memory to produce your report and not written to disk — unless you explicitly choose to save it to an anonymous account for trend tracking.

Anonymous accounts

If you save results, the account is anonymous by default — a handle and a key, no email required. Email is optional, only for recovery, and clearly marked as a trade-off.

One-click deletion

You can export everything and permanently delete your account and all stored results at any time. Deletion is immediate and complete.

No trackers on your report

Report pages carry no third-party advertising or analytics trackers. Your results are not used to build an ad profile.

Sharing is consent-only

A coach can only see your panels if you explicitly link your account to theirs, and you can revoke that access at any time. Nothing is shared by default.

Data residency

When accounts are enabled, data is stored in Canada (ca-central). We tell you where your data lives.

What we don’t do

We don’t sell or share your health data. We don’t require your identity to give you value. We don’t put your results in front of anyone you didn’t choose. And we don’t pretend a bloodwork report is a substitute for a doctor — FullPanel is an educational tool, not medical advice.

If a feature ever requires loosening any of these promises, it will be opt-in and explained in plain language first. Privacy here is an architecture decision, not a policy paragraph.

Read your bloodwork, anonymously

No account. Nothing stored unless you say so.

Analyze →
How the analysis works →

This page describes FullPanel’s privacy model in plain language. A formal privacy policy and terms of service will accompany public launch.