Health Checks Work But What Happens Next?

Rethinking Cholesterol Testing in Preventative Care.

Cholesterol testing sits at the heart of cardiovascular risk assessment.

It’s one of the most widely used and accessible tools in preventative healthcare — and a core component of NHS Health Checks.

But an important question remains:

Are we maximising the impact of that testing?

The evidence is clear: Health Checks add value

A growing body of research shows that NHS Health Checks are effective:

  • Increased disease detection

https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/2/e052832.long

  • Associated with reduced disease and mortality risk

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12916-023-03187-w

  • Referrals and advice are being delivered

https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/12/11/e064237

At a system level, this supports the shift toward earlier identification of cardiovascular risk — including elevated cholesterol.

Health Checks Work

But outcomes don’t just depend on detection

Alongside these positive findings, there’s a consistent and important theme:

  • Follow-up is variable
  • Patient understanding of results varies

https://bjgp.org/content/75/753/e222

  • Some experiences are non-personalised, with limited continuity

https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/8/e017169

This highlights a critical point:

The value of a cholesterol test is not just in the result — it’s in what happens next.

Where is impact being lost?

In many pathways, there is a gap between:

  • Testing
  • Communication of results
  • And meaningful action

For cholesterol in particular, this can mean:

  • Delayed lifestyle interventions
  • Delayed initiation or adjustment of treatment
  • Missed opportunities to influence long-term cardiovascular risk

Even when patients are identified early, the pathway between detection and action is not always consistent.

The role of immediacy in preventative care

If we already know that clear communication and actionable insight are key drivers of behaviour change, it raises a simple question:

Would outcomes improve if results were available there and then?

Instead of:

  • Testing at one point
  • Discussing results later

What if:

  • Results could be shared immediately
  • Conversations could happen in real time
  • Decisions could be made during the same interaction

Where point-of-care testing fits

Point-of-care testing (POCT) doesn’t replace existing pathways — but it has the potential to strengthen them.

Particularly in cholesterol management, it can help to:

✔ Discuss results immediately, while the patient is present

✔ Link findings directly to personalised advice or treatment decisions

✔ Reduce the drop-off between testing and follow-up

From measurement to meaningful impact

Cholesterol testing is already widely embedded in healthcare systems.

The opportunity now is not simply to do more testing —

but to make that testing more effective.

That means:

  • Improving how results are communicated
  • Reducing delays between testing and action
  • Making preventative care more immediate and engaging

Final thought

The next step in cholesterol management isn’t just about identifying risk.

It’s about ensuring that risk is understood, acted on, and followed through — without delay.

Because in preventative care, timing isn’t just important.

It’s everything.