Medical Tests After 40: Your Smart Guide + Downloadable Tracker Inside
Reading time 7 min

Reading time 7 min

As we move through our 40s and beyond, it’s not just our hormones that change; our risks for certain diseases also increase. Modern medicine offers us the tools to catch many of these changes early, if we know what to ask for. And that’s a big if1,2,3,4.
I have created Your Smart Guide to Medical Tests after 40 to guide you through the maze of what’s essential, what’s optional, and what might just give you peace of mind. It’s a downloadable tracker that helps you prepare for your next doctor’s visit and take the guesswork out of screening.
What medical tests should women over 40 get?
Women 40+ should prioritise recommended screenings that catch silent risks early, like cardiometabolic labs, thyroid and iron/ferritin checks, and age-appropriate cancer screening, etc. Then personalise frequency by history and symptoms. Use the downloadable tracker below to log results and retest dates.
INTERACTIVE TRACKER
A CLEAR, SCIENCE-BASED LIST of the most important medical tests recommended for women 40+.
EXPLANATIONS of why each test matters during perimenopause, menopause, and postmenopause.
A PRACTICAL WORKSHEET you can fill in with your own results, making it easy to track trends over time.
GUIDANCE on when to ask for these tests and how often to repeat them.
I discovered my ferritin was extremely low almost by accident. Standard blood tests said everything looked “normal,” yet I felt persistently tired and my nails had become brittle and thin. I asked my doctor for a ferritin test (something not included in the usual panel) and it turned out my iron stores were severely depleted.
Oral supplements barely helped, so I ended up needing IV iron infusions every six months for two years. Each infusion brought an immediate, dramatic boost in energy. That experience showed me how easy it is to miss critical pieces unless you know what to ask for.
Most national screening recommendations (like the latest from NICE, EU health boards, and menopause societies) suggest testing only if you’re at “risk” or have symptoms. Sensible on paper, but not always ideal in practice. These guidelines aim to protect healthcare budgets, not necessarily optimize your long-term health.
“Most national screening recommendations suggest testing only if you’re at “risk” or have symptoms. Sensible on paper, but not always ideal in practice.”
Guidelines are written for populations. You live in one body with its own family history, vulnerabilities, and goals. That’s why this Tracker goes beyond the bare minimum and gives you the tools to personalize your testing strategy based on what’s actually happening in your life and body. If your doctor says, “we don’t usually test that,” you’ll know how to respond (politely — but firmly).
Perimenopause and postmenopause can come with vague, confusing symptoms. A little fatigue here, a little hair shedding there… and before you know it, you’re dealing with undiagnosed thyroid issues, iron depletion, or creeping insulin resistance. It doesn’t have to be that way. Some tests may save your life. Others may simply explain why your energy’s off.
Just keep in mind: this list covers the essential screenings for generally healthy women going through the menopause transition. It’s not a substitute for specialist testing. If something unusual shows up, or if you already have a diagnosed condition, your doctor will guide you through additional, more targeted tests. This guide is your starting point to understand testing possibilities and options you have to empower you to talk to your doctor, it is not medical advice.
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