BRANNEL SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 9

Practice Code: L82011 | ST AUSTELL, PL26 7RL

Showing results 401-450 of 585

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Omega-3-acid ethyl esters262,912£1.4K+23.0% ▲
Insulin Lispro26130£748-66.0% ▼
Dexamethasone26750£55-16.6% ▼
Mercaptopurine26892£439+67.9% ▲
Indometacin261,540£106+65.2% ▲
Mefenamic acid26750£145-42.4% ▼
Imipramine hydrochloride252,464£89-1.9% vs avg
Combined ethinylestradiol 35mcg251,470£91+100.7% ▲
Specialist food replacer desserts (0913261)2513.7K£544+174.9% ▲
2511.0K£758-34.4% ▼
Zinc oxide24380£61+16.0% ▲
Enoxaparin24564£1.8K+17.1% ▲
Nefopam hydrochloride242,098£88-78.8% ▼
Entacapone242,810£620+57.4% ▲
Erythromycin24756£291-30.7% ▼
Valaciclovir24711£945+70.8% ▲
Acetic acid24120£111+107.2% ▲
24660£459-7.9% ▼
24360£446+39.4% ▲
Hydroxyzine hydrochloride23644£21-56.8% ▼
Somatropin23115£9.9K+62.3% ▲
Fluticasone propionate/azelastine hydrochloride (Nasal)2323£314-79.7% ▼
Typhoid2323£228-74.5% ▼
2386£305+129.9% ▲
2376£1.1K+126.6% ▲
2318.0K£2.1K-21.7% ▼
23759£308-71.4% ▼
Tiotropium bromide/olodaterol2222£662-64.1% ▼
Ondansetron hydrochloride22460£202-54.7% ▼
Norethisterone22699£117-54.6% ▼
Alprostadil2266£743+28.6% ▲
Octreotide acetate22624£4.3K+254.0% ▲
Specialist food replacer sweet biscuits (0913261)225,778£325+53.4% ▲
Fludroxycortide2222£702+108.6% ▲
222,595£363+66.8% ▲
224,245£767-46.3% ▼
Balsalazide sodium211,323£296+41.0% ▲
Ferrous gluconate21672£20-56.1% ▼
Benzalkonium chloride217,350£168+56.7% ▲
Metronidazole21650£171-44.1% ▼
21141£247+128.1% ▲
Aclidinium bromide/formoterol2020£598-43.1% ▼
Tibolone20560£50-34.6% ▼
RtS extensively hydrolysed formula, high energy (0913103)2076.2K£1.7K+249.4% ▲
20240£651-58.2% ▼
20430£430-1.9% vs avg
Propantheline bromide191,808£1.5K+46.4% ▲
Analgesics with anti-emetics19664£221+34.3% ▲
Powder thickener - gum based (0913161)197,353£222-74.7% ▼
Dantrolene sodium192,600£405+5.3% ▲
← Back to BRANNEL SURGERY
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.