Comprehensive Health Guides

Health Guides are Heal & Happy’s most detailed content — long-form, structured articles that cover a health topic from understanding to management. Each guide is written or reviewed by a medical professional and is designed to be genuinely useful, not just reassuring.

Guides by Category

Diagnostics & Lab Tests

  • Understanding your complete blood count (CBC)
  • How to read a lipid panel and what each number means
  • Blood pressure numbers explained: systolic, diastolic, and pulse pressure
  • What HbA1c tells you about blood sugar over time
  • Thyroid function tests: TSH, T3, T4, and when antibodies matter

Chronic Condition Management

  • Living well with Type 2 diabetes: diet, monitoring, and medication basics
  • Hypertension management without over-relying on medication
  • Managing hypothyroidism: what to expect from levothyroxine
  • Osteoarthritis of the knee: a complete guide to conservative care
  • PCOS management: hormonal balance through lifestyle and treatment

Preventive Health

  • The adult health screening schedule: what to check and when
  • Cardiovascular risk assessment: understanding your 10-year risk score
  • Cancer screening guidelines for Indian adults
  • Vaccination schedule for adults: what you may have missed
  • Building bone density in your 30s and 40s before it becomes urgent

Medication & Treatment

  • Statins explained: who needs them, how they work, and what side effects to watch
  • Antihypertensive medications: understanding the main drug classes
  • Iron supplementation: forms, dosing, and why timing matters
  • Vitamin D: supplementing correctly and avoiding toxicity
  • When to use antibiotics and when to wait

How Guides Are Created

Each Health Guide begins with a detailed brief reviewed by a clinician in the relevant specialty. The writing follows clinical guidelines from organisations including the Indian Council of Medical Research, the World Health Organization, and relevant specialty societies. A medical reviewer approves the final text before publication, and guides are updated when guidelines change.

Guides are designed for people who want more than a surface-level answer — readers who have a diagnosis, are supporting a family member, or simply want to understand their health decisions properly. They are not designed to replace specialist consultations, but to help you arrive better prepared for them.