No. Your doctor will write a request form for the lab to test your sample (blood, urine, faces, swab etc). Depending on the test you may need to collect the sample yourself e.g. urine or stool sample. If it is a blood test, you will need to go to phlebotomy at your local hospital to have a sample of blood collected. However, some nurses at your local surgery may do this. For biopsies of skin or complex procedures you may need to attend a specialised clinic to have the sample collected.
A prescription is only for medication. Not for a laboratory test.
A written prescription for lab tests is typically valid for a specified period of time determined by the healthcare provider, which is usually around 6 months. It's important to check the expiration date on the prescription as some tests may require more immediate processing.
Serum creatinine
If your prescription is recognized as the cause of the result of your lab test, it is okay. Otherwise, you won't have a case. Companies run drug tests because they want their employees and those around them to be safe, not to mention efficient.
It's testable, and it's also a prescription drug. If I was the drug control officer for your hospital, I would--nurses have access to the PDR, which has ALL the good drugs in it.
Blood tests
What procedure is done in a monitor lab
Blood tests, urine tests, and tissue tests can be used to confirm a diagnosis of lipidoses.
Yes
There is no need for a laboratory investigation to confirm a leprosy diagnosis, except in very rare circumstances.
if you have problembs sleeping you go to a sleep lab where they can do tests on you and see what problembs you have with your sleep
is the lab open today for blood tests
all the good ones...