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pathology5 min read

Clinpath Pathology Results (SA): Free Decoder & Patient Guide 2026

Published by BloodTrack Team
Clinpath Pathology Results (SA): Free Decoder & Patient Guide 2026

Key Takeaway

Clinpath Pathology results (South Australia, part of Sonic Healthcare) are accessed through My Health Record and your referring GP, who receives them electronically. Routine blood test results are generally available within 2–3 days. Reports follow the standard RCPA format: marker, your value, unit, reference range, and an H or L flag for out-of-range results.

Clinpath Pathology — part of the Sonic Healthcare group — is one of the largest pathology providers in South Australia, with collection centres across Adelaide and regional SA. If your GP referred you for blood tests in South Australia, Clinpath is one of the most likely providers. This guide walks you through every part of a Clinpath report.

How to access your Clinpath Pathology results

There are three reliable ways to see your results:

  1. My Health Record — from 2026, Australian pathology providers upload most results to My Health Record by default. Log in at myhealthrecord.gov.au or via the myGov / Medicare app to view them.
  2. Through your GP — your doctor receives your results electronically as soon as Clinpath releases them, usually within 2–3 business days for routine tests.
  3. Clinpath website — visit clinpath.com.au for collection-centre locations, pre-test fasting information and patient contact details.

You do not need to wait for your follow-up appointment to see your results. Reading them ahead of time means you can ask better, more specific questions during your consultation.

The structure of a Clinpath pathology report

Clinpath reports follow the standard RCPA (Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia) format used by all major Australian providers. Each report includes:

  • Header: your name, date of birth, the requesting doctor, the collection centre, collection date and time, and a unique accession number.
  • Tests grouped by panel: Full Blood Count (FBC), Liver Function Test (LFT), Urea/Electrolytes/Creatinine (EUC), Iron Studies, Lipids, Thyroid Function, and so on.
  • For each marker: abbreviated name, your value, the unit, and Clinpath's reference range (sex- and age-adjusted where appropriate).
  • Flags: H (high) or L (low) beside out-of-range results; HH or LL for critical values.
  • Pathologist comments: interpretive notes on unusual or markedly abnormal results.

Common abbreviations on a Clinpath report

AbbreviationFull nameWhat it measures
FBC / FBEFull Blood Count / ExaminationRed cells, white cells, platelets and indices
HbHaemoglobinOxygen-carrying protein in red blood cells
HCT / PCVHaematocritProportion of blood that is red cells
MCHMean Corpuscular HaemoglobinAverage haemoglobin per red cell
MCVMean Corpuscular VolumeAverage size of red blood cells
LFTLiver Function TestALT, AST, GGT, ALP, bilirubin, albumin
ALTAlanine AminotransferaseLiver enzyme — most liver-specific
ASTAspartate AminotransferaseLiver / muscle enzyme
GGTGamma-Glutamyl TransferaseLiver / biliary enzyme; alcohol-sensitive
EUC / U+EUrea, Electrolytes & CreatinineKidney function panel
eGFREstimated Glomerular Filtration RateKidney filtration rate
TSHThyroid Stimulating HormonePituitary signal to the thyroid
FerritinFerritinIron storage protein
HbA1cGlycated Haemoglobin3-month average glucose
CRP / hsCRPC-Reactive ProteinInflammation

Reference ranges on Clinpath reports

Clinpath uses RCPA-aligned reference ranges with sex- and age-adjustments. Useful ones to know:

  • ALT: men <40 U/L, women <35 U/L
  • Ferritin: men 30–300 µg/L, women 15–200 µg/L (RACGP defines iron deficiency as <30 µg/L)
  • TSH: 0.4–4.0 mIU/L
  • HbA1c: <42 mmol/mol (<6.0%) normal · 42–47 (6.0–6.4%) pre-diabetes · ≥48 (≥6.5%) diabetes
  • 25-OH Vitamin D: 50–150 nmol/L sufficient · 30–49 mild deficiency · <30 moderate-to-severe

Remember: "normal" is not the same as "optimal". A reference range describes the middle 95% of a healthy population — not necessarily the level linked to the lowest disease risk.

The H and L flags

  • Mildly flagged isolated results are often non-significant — recent infection raises ferritin and CRP, intense exercise raises AST and CK, dehydration raises urea. Repeat in 4–8 weeks if your GP agrees.
  • Coherent multi-marker patterns matter more: low ferritin + low haemoglobin + low MCV = iron-deficiency anaemia; a high AST/ALT ratio with high GGT suggests alcohol-related liver disease.
  • HH or LL (critical) — the pathologist phones your GP directly. Arrange a prompt review.

How to track your Clinpath results over time

Clinpath may show a recent prior result on the same report, but only for tests done at Clinpath — not other providers you may have used interstate or earlier. BloodTrack fixes that: upload your Clinpath PDF and every biomarker is extracted, mapped to RCPA-aligned ranges, and charted over time across every provider you have ever used, with out-of-range values flagged in plain English. It runs entirely in your browser — upload your Clinpath PDF for free instant analysis, no account needed for your first test.

What to do if there is an error on your Clinpath report

If something looks clearly wrong — a male range applied to a female patient, a missing test, results inconsistent with how you feel — contact your referring GP first, and Clinpath patient services via the contact details at clinpath.com.au. Most issues are resolved by re-issuing a corrected report or repeating the test at no cost where appropriate.

Common Clinpath report patterns explained

For interpretation of common patterns — iron deficiency, fatty liver, thyroid dysfunction, PCOS, insulin resistance — see our companion guide: Free Online Blood Test Analysis: How to Interpret Australian Pathology Reports. For deeper detail on each marker, browse the BloodTrack biomarker glossary.

Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always discuss your blood test results with a qualified healthcare professional. BloodTrack is not affiliated with Clinpath Pathology or Sonic Healthcare.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I access my Clinpath Pathology results?

From 2026, Clinpath uploads most results to My Health Record by default — view them at myhealthrecord.gov.au or through the myGov/Medicare app. Your GP also receives them electronically as soon as they are released, usually within 2–3 business days for routine tests. Visit clinpath.com.au for collection centres and contact details.

How long do Clinpath Pathology results take?

Routine blood tests (full blood count, liver function, iron studies, lipids, thyroid, HbA1c) are generally available within 2–3 days of collection. More complex testing — some hormones, microbiology cultures and genetic tests — can take longer. Critical results are phoned through to your GP the same day.

What does H or L mean on my Clinpath report?

H means your result is above Clinpath's reference range for your sex and age; L means below. HH and LL indicate critically abnormal results. A single mildly flagged value is often non-significant and can reflect recent infection, exercise or a meal — several related markers shifting together is more meaningful. Always discuss flagged results with your GP.

Is Clinpath the same as Clinipath?

No — they are different labs with similar names. Clinpath Pathology serves South Australia, while Clinipath Pathology serves Western Australia. Both are part of the Sonic Healthcare group, but they operate as separate brands with separate reports and collection centres.

Are Clinpath Pathology tests bulk-billed?

Most standard pathology tests ordered by your GP for clinical investigation are bulk-billed under Medicare. Some specialised or non-rebated tests (such as AMH outside IVF) may carry an out-of-pocket cost — staff will advise you of any fee when you check in.

Can I track my Clinpath results over time?

Clinpath may show a recent prior result on the same report, but only for tests done at Clinpath. To track every biomarker across all providers you have used, upload your Clinpath PDF to BloodTrack — it charts trends over time and flags out-of-range results in plain English, free for your first test with no account.

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