BEECH HILL MEDICAL PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: P92010 | WIGAN, WN6 7PD

Showing results 351-400 of 701

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Metronidazole682,540£767+80.9% ▲
68694£107+80.8% ▲
Atomoxetine hydrochloride673,024£3.8K+98.2% ▲
Tacrolimus675,650£8.3K+150.5% ▲
Sodium chloride675,414£3.4K+125.3% ▲
Benzoyl peroxide and clindamycin phosphate672,850£1.2K-0.1% vs avg
Typhoid6767£692-25.6% ▼
673,540£8.6K+339.9% ▲
Betamethasone esters665,490£593+9.4% ▲
Lacosamide654,620£2.9K+21.0% ▲
Permethrin643,360£925+69.9% ▲
Galantamine632,556£4.1K+66.5% ▲
Duloxetine hydrochloride632,334£441+22.9% ▲
Specialist food replacer rolls/baguettes (0913271)6337.4K£581+160.9% ▲
635,880£9.9K+29.3% ▲
Etoricoxib622,576£538-23.0% ▼
Pimecrolimus622,670£1.6K+266.2% ▲
Miconazole nitrate612,340£370-13.8% ▼
Ursodeoxycholic acid607,332£3.4K-9.3% ▼
Lithium carbonate592,744£442-53.5% ▼
59700£1.9K+23.4% ▲
Glucose584,380£399+11.5% ▲
Sodium feredetate5827.5K£780+102.5% ▲
5849.2K£2.1K+52.1% ▲
58975£123+115.9% ▲
Linaclotide571,596£2.0K+212.0% ▲
Losartan potassium with diuretic572,044£332+122.3% ▲
Dalteparin sodium57959£6.1K+245.0% ▲
Sucralfate5614.6K£17.2K+566.8% ▲
Oxytetracycline566,132£2.4K+116.8% ▲
Insulin detemir56425£3.6K-28.5% ▼
Midazolam hydrochloride56741£422+36.8% ▲
55393£197-46.2% ▼
558,590£1.9K+101.4% ▲
Sennosides5413.2K£255+74.9% ▲
Rasagiline mesilate541,708£1.2K+45.4% ▲
Erythromycin ethylsuccinate546,624£686+131.3% ▲
543,718£767-21.2% ▼
Dexamethasone531,383£523+70.0% ▲
53154£1.5K+90.5% ▲
Safinamide521,807£4.0K+158.1% ▲
Norethisterone522,583£420+7.2% ▲
523,240£5.6K+194.9% ▲
52680£440+20.6% ▲
Zuclopenthixol hydrochloride515,100£265+61.7% ▲
Specialist food replacer pasta (0913261)5149.5K£933+246.2% ▲
Chlorhexidine gluconate5124.8K£465+72.7% ▲
Tapentadol503,860£4.0K+21.5% ▲
Bicalutamide501,400£76+54.6% ▲
Specialist food replacer sweet biscuits (0913261)5021.7K£1.4K+248.5% ▲
← Back to BEECH HILL MEDICAL PRACTICE
Data sourced from NHSBSA English Prescribing Dataset, CQC, and GP Patient Survey. Prescribing data does not indicate quality of care. Higher prescribing rates may reflect patient demographics. Always consult your GP for medical advice.