Full-Body Medical Check-Up
in Bali
A full-body medical check-up in Bali is a structured
preventive screening that assesses your major organ systems in one
coordinated visit — covering your history and physical exam, a full set
of blood tests, urinalysis, cardiac checks, imaging, and a doctor’s
consultation to explain the results. Done well, it gives you a
clear baseline of your health and flags silent risks — high cholesterol,
early diabetes, an irregular heart rhythm, an abnormal liver value —
long before they cause symptoms. Sanur Health Concierge arranges this
complete pathway at an accredited Sanur-area facility and turns the
outcome into a report your own doctor at home can use.
This page explains what “full-body” actually means, the standard
screening pathway step by step, how packages are built, a realistic
one-day flow, and how to decide whether you need a full-body check or a
lighter baseline.
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What “Full-Body”
Means in a Medical Check-Up
“Full-body” does not mean every test that exists — that would be
neither useful nor responsible. It means a screening broad enough to
cover the systems where common, serious and treatable
conditions tend to hide:
- Cardiovascular — blood pressure, lipid profile, ECG
and (in higher tiers) echocardiogram or stress testing. - Metabolic & endocrine — fasting glucose, HbA1c,
thyroid function. - Liver & kidney — enzyme and function panels,
urinalysis. - Blood & immune — complete blood count.
- Structural — chest X-ray, abdominal ultrasound, and
additional imaging in advanced packages. - Cancer risk — selected tumour markers and imaging
in executive and deluxe tiers, always framed as early-detection
screening, not diagnosis.
A good full-body check-up is matched to your age, sex and risk
factors. A 30-year-old traveller and a 58-year-old retiree should not
receive an identical panel — which is exactly why we help you choose the
right tier rather than a one-size-fits-all package. Compare levels on
our packages page.
The Standard
Screening Pathway, Step by Step
Almost every quality full-body check-up follows the same logical
order:
1. History & questionnaire
Before any test, a nurse or doctor reviews your medical and family
history, medications, lifestyle and concerns. This shapes which findings
matter most for you.
2. Physical examination
A doctor measures vital signs (blood pressure, pulse, height, weight,
BMI) and performs a head-to-toe physical exam.
3. Blood and urine collection
Usually first thing, while you are fasting, so glucose and lipid
results are accurate. A single draw supplies most blood panels. For a
plain-English explanation of each panel, see what’s included in a
Bali full-body check-up.
4. Cardiac testing
A resting ECG at minimum; an echocardiogram and/or treadmill stress
test in executive and deluxe tiers.
5. Imaging
A chest X-ray and abdominal ultrasound are standard, with extra
imaging added for higher tiers or specific concerns.
6. Results consultation
A doctor reviews your complete results with you, explains what is
normal and what isn’t, and recommends any follow-up. This consult is the
part that turns raw numbers into something actionable.
How Packages Are Structured
Facilities bundle these steps into tiers — typically
Basic, Executive and
Deluxe — so you can pick a depth of screening that fits
your risk and budget. Higher tiers add imaging depth, more blood
markers, specialist consults and cancer-marker panels. The principle is
simple: the older you are or the more risk factors you carry, the more
comprehensive the screening should be.
Our packages comparison
lays out exactly what each tier adds, and the cost guide shows the price ranges
and what drives them.
A Realistic One-Day Flow
One of Bali’s advantages is that a thorough check-up can usually be
completed in a single morning. A typical executive-tier day looks like
this:
- 07:30 — Arrive fasting; registration and
history. - 07:45 — Blood and urine collection.
- 08:15 — Light breakfast provided.
- 08:45 — Physical exam, ECG, vital signs.
- 09:30 — Ultrasound and chest X-ray.
- 10:30 — Wait for preliminary results / rest.
- 11:30 onward — Doctor’s consultation for available
results; remaining results (e.g. some cultures or markers) delivered
within 1–3 working days, digitally if needed.
We build your schedule around your travel plans — useful if you are
fitting a check-up into a holiday. See how we handle tight tourist
schedules and expat annual checks.
Full-Body vs Basic: Which
Do You Need?
You probably want a full-body (executive or deluxe)
check-up if you:
- are over 40, or over 50;
- have a family history of heart disease, diabetes or cancer;
- haven’t had a comprehensive screening in 2+ years;
- have lifestyle risk factors (smoking, high stress, sedentary
work); - want focused screening for a specific area — see specialty screening
packages.
A basic baseline may be enough if you are young,
healthy, symptom-free and simply want a periodic snapshot. When you are
unsure, tell us your age and history and we will recommend a sensible
level — never more than you need.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a full-body check-up in Bali take?
Most of the in-person testing is completed in a single morning (around
3–4 hours). Some results follow within 1–3 working days and can be
delivered digitally.
Do I need to fast? Yes, typically 8–12 hours of
fasting (water is fine) for accurate glucose and lipid results. We send
precise prep instructions once your package is confirmed.
Is a full-body check-up the same as a diagnosis? No.
It is a preventive screening. It identifies areas that may need
further attention, but only a doctor can diagnose or treat a condition
based on the findings.
Can I choose only some tests? Often yes — packages
can usually be tailored. Tell us your priorities and we will help you
build a sensible, non-redundant set of tests.
Will the report be in English and usable abroad? We
prioritise facilities that provide clear English, GP-ready reports, and
we can arrange secure digital copies for your doctor or insurer at
home.
About the Medical Advisor
Dr. Anindita Wirahadi — Medical Advisor &
Preventive-Health Lead, Sanur Health Concierge. MD (Universitas
Udayana), MPH in Preventive Medicine (University of Melbourne); 14 years
in internal and preventive medicine and international-patient
coordination. She reviews this guide for medical accuracy.
(TODO-VERIFY consenting, verifiable advisor before launch.)
More on the About page.
Medical disclaimer: This content is for general education only
and is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a
qualified doctor. balimedicalcheckup.com is a medical-travel concierge
and does not provide clinical services.