BROWNSOVER MEDICAL CENTRE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: Y06218 | RUGBY, CV21 1JF

Showing results 351-400 of 515

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Chlorhexidine gluconate2913.3K£270-1.8% vs avg
29329£737+112.6% ▲
292,068£144-58.4% ▼
Rasagiline mesilate28784£522-24.6% ▼
Etonogestrel2828£2.3K-3.1% ▼
Exemestane28814£163-13.8% ▼
Brinzolamide and timolol28205£329-25.9% ▼
28443£187-72.6% ▼
2828£124-45.4% ▼
281,260£3.1K+83.8% ▲
Lisinopril with diuretic27756£213+31.6% ▲
Pizotifen malate271,064£43-67.2% ▼
Rotigotine27756£2.7K+0.1% vs avg
27164£970+52.2% ▲
Midodrine hydrochloride261,913£402-46.6% ▼
Pioglitazone hydrochloride26728£29-70.6% ▼
Glucose261,870£153-50.0% ▼
Triptorelin2626£5.4K+23.3% ▲
Powder amino acid formula (0913131)26128.4K£12.4K+143.8% ▲
Specialist food replacer flour type mixes (0913271)2621.0K£299+13.9% ▲
Other toiletry preparations267,050£83-39.1% ▼
261,030£5.0K+0.5% vs avg
Ranolazine251,860£321-85.3% ▼
Zolpidem tartrate25654£28-72.3% ▼
Haloperidol252,452£20.7K-47.5% ▼
Trazodone hydrochloride251,008£28-87.8% ▼
Ciprofloxacin25318£22-37.3% ▼
Ibandronic acid25376£357-31.2% ▼
Betamethasone esters251,200£175-58.6% ▼
Hydrocortisone acetate25810£155-62.1% ▼
Valsartan with diuretic24672£541+81.1% ▲
248,800£1.4K-38.9% ▼
Amiodarone hydrochloride23672£37-64.3% ▼
23764£373-41.6% ▼
Empagliflozin/metformin221,232£765-57.7% ▼
Colchicine22600£13-71.8% ▼
Travoprost22440£183-53.3% ▼
Timolol and brimonidine22110£255+56.8% ▲
221,450£5.2K-9.7% ▼
Metoprolol tartrate21896£240-58.6% ▼
Nicorandil211,260£146-85.4% ▼
Dabigatran etexilate211,260£1.1K-59.4% ▼
Umeclidinium bromide2121£549-65.9% ▼
Ciclesonide2122£587+42.6% ▲
Methenamine hippurate211,260£394-76.9% ▼
Febuxostat21462£36-43.8% ▼
Other individually formulated bought in preparations21416£197-35.7% ▼
21370£2.6K+65.7% ▲
Terbutaline sulphate2025£197-63.1% ▼
Tiotropium bromide/olodaterol2020£618-67.4% ▼
← Back to BROWNSOVER MEDICAL CENTRE
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.