BRINSLEY AVENUE PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 6

Practice Code: M83601 | STOKE-ON-TRENT, ST4 8LT

Showing results 251-300 of 598

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Vitamin B compound936,104£931-33.2% ▼
Fentanyl91710£1.9K-11.2% ▼
Carvedilol904,788£178-20.7% ▼
Ranolazine906,288£1.1K-47.0% ▼
Glucose907,445£659+73.1% ▲
907,063£778+11.9% ▲
Hydrocortisone acetate893,210£613+34.8% ▲
Ondansetron hydrochloride885,004£1.9K+81.4% ▲
Lymecycline884,228£484-26.8% ▼
Nystatin872,760£158-13.7% ▼
Nebivolol863,734£1.9K-18.9% ▼
Valproic acid865,070£1.5K-1.2% vs avg
Aciclovir863,862£243-42.2% ▼
Oral rehydration salts861,200£458+197.7% ▲
RtS 2-2.4 kcal/ml m/sk higher protein,higher energy(0913011)861.4M£19.7K+96.6% ▲
Liquid OTC glucose for diabetic hypo treatment (0913541)8638.6K£602+275.3% ▲
Cefalexin856,865£300-26.9% ▼
853,020£2.2K+157.0% ▲
Midodrine hydrochloride847,210£1.6K+72.4% ▲
Fusidic acid841,860£242-34.2% ▼
8422.5K£1.1K+120.3% ▲
835,185£509+148.7% ▲
826,470£1.4K+218.0% ▲
Fluconazole801,393£553+3.5% ▲
Menthol7932.3K£1.2K+180.5% ▲
794,516£1.5K+168.8% ▲
Olmesartan medoxomil783,500£155+13.2% ▲
Carbimazole783,090£173-31.0% ▼
Rasagiline mesilate752,576£1.7K+101.9% ▲
Clobetasol propionate754,635£367-45.0% ▼
Sulfasalazine7410.7K£4.2K-43.1% ▼
Umeclidinium bromide7494£2.5K+20.0% ▲
Topiramate735,828£590-58.9% ▼
Etoricoxib732,800£665-9.4% ▼
7190£211+119.1% ▲
Pramipexole707,692£514-28.7% ▼
Procyclidine hydrochloride706,038£1.7K-50.5% ▼
Emollient bath and shower preparations7028.4K£395+11.4% ▲
69877£864+113.2% ▲
Sotalol hydrochloride685,264£228-3.3% ▼
Nortriptyline684,908£300-53.3% ▼
Oxybutynin686,296£1.7K-64.3% ▼
681,762£271+127.6% ▲
Miconazole nitrate672,610£331-5.3% ▼
672,096£612+35.6% ▲
Salmeterol6683£2.4K+174.4% ▲
Glimepiride663,316£96-28.5% ▼
Benzydamine hydrochloride667,560£282-14.7% ▼
Theophylline644,396£2.2K-23.5% ▼
Co-trimoxazole(Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole)641,461£127+59.3% ▲
← Back to BRINSLEY AVENUE 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.