BURGESS ROAD SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: J82001 | SOUTHAMPTON, SO16 3BD

Showing results 351-400 of 487

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake higher volume (0913011)25110.0K£671+23.6% ▲
Etoricoxib25980£250-69.0% ▼
Ipratropium bromide2525£176+54.2% ▲
Erythromycin251,080£478+84.1% ▲
Chlorphenamine maleate242,138£53-78.3% ▼
Perindopril erbumine231,376£76-95.7% ▼
Erythromycin231,652£576-33.6% ▼
Calcitriol231,288£223+47.4% ▲
Powder thickener - starch based (0913161)2340.9K£1.1K+60.1% ▲
Azelaic acid23840£159-3.8% ▼
2323£66-89.6% ▼
23230£756-25.2% ▼
23230£337-11.7% ▼
Sotalol hydrochloride222,268£68-68.7% ▼
Trimipramine maleate221,680£9.4K+38.1% ▲
Tizanidine hydrochloride223,628£154-16.9% ▼
221,230£2.5K-44.8% ▼
223,950£250-55.9% ▼
221,100£3.7K-9.7% ▼
Glyceryl trinitrate21630£784+58.1% ▲
Amisulpride211,512£357-70.1% ▼
Levodopa/carbidopa/entacapone213,640£1.2K-24.9% ▼
Varenicline tartrate21606£855+112.1% ▲
Ascorbic acid21672£615+2.3% ▲
Carbomer 940/98021490£107-86.2% ▼
2156£970+52.1% ▲
Mometasone/glycopyrronium/indacaterol20600£846+31.9% ▲
Dutasteride201,120£65-61.0% ▼
Desmopressin acetate201,560£1.2K-61.7% ▼
RtS 1.4 - 2 kcal/g dessert style (milk based) (0913011)2098.0K£1.8K-47.6% ▼
Carmellose sodium201,140£151-69.1% ▼
Terbinafine hydrochloride20630£111-46.1% ▼
201,609£309-92.8% ▼
2052£204-35.5% ▼
20810£3.0K-10.4% ▼
Labetalol hydrochloride192,240£334-16.3% ▼
Ranolazine191,692£298-88.8% ▼
Cinnarizine191,182£55-59.4% ▼
Pramipexole192,916£216-80.6% ▼
Fesoterodine fumarate19854£71-51.8% ▼
Hydroxycarbamide191,060£165-34.1% ▼
Ready to serve 1 kcal/ml milkshake lower energy (0913021)1954.0K£1.0K+89.4% ▲
Phenazone/lidocaine19285£161+85.8% ▲
191,829£3.3K-43.7% ▼
1992£261-21.4% ▼
Glycopyrronium bromide182,896£2.7K-12.3% ▼
Enoxaparin18546£3.6K-12.2% ▼
Ciprofloxacin18526£44-54.9% ▼
Tibolone18952£86-41.2% ▼
Sevelamer182,208£488-17.9% ▼
← Back to BURGESS ROAD 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.