BURLEIGH MEDICAL CENTRE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 12

Practice Code: C85017 | BARNSLEY, S70 1DR

Showing results 551-600 of 679

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
18380£409-44.4% ▼
18124£56+51.0% ▲
1852£384-35.3% ▼
18161£109+306.9% ▲
18180£496-62.4% ▼
18100£282+23.3% ▲
Dalteparin sodium17370£2.0K+2.9% ▲
Alimemazine tartrate17980£1.4K+31.5% ▲
Simple173,400£26+48.1% ▲
Guanfacine17532£1.1K-33.8% ▼
Co-trimoxazole(Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole)17392£18-57.7% ▼
Propylthiouracil171,568£289+35.3% ▲
Powder 2.3 - 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake lower volume (0913011)17651£335-33.8% ▼
Urea hydrogen peroxide17136£55+239.4% ▲
Benzoyl peroxide17540£93+20.6% ▲
17120£237+44.2% ▲
17130£199+124.5% ▲
17190£262+76.0% ▲
17640£294-58.5% ▼
17430£1.7K+11.7% ▲
Salbutamol16960£367+138.3% ▲
Hyoscine hydrobromide161,088£168-53.1% ▼
Tacrolimus16800£1.5K-40.2% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake with fibre (0913021)16160.4K£4.2K+15.9% ▲
Specialist food replacer ready meals (0913261)164,360£548+86.0% ▲
Etodolac16630£310-42.2% ▼
Calamine163,400£25+111.1% ▲
161,830£3.0K-13.1% ▼
161,720£429+50.4% ▲
Phosphates (Rectal)15116£463+22.7% ▲
Labetalol hydrochloride15840£118-33.9% ▼
Aclidinium bromide/formoterol1515£463-57.3% ▼
Urine testing reagents15750£41+34.1% ▲
Dexamethasone15432£151-51.9% ▼
Propiverine hydrochloride15420£349+0.2% vs avg
Other calcium supplement preparations15440£197+100.0% ▲
Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake higher volume (0913011)15105.0K£639-25.8% ▼
Specialist food replacer bread (0913261)1537.0K£385+51.6% ▲
Co-cyprindiol (Cyprote acetate/ethinylestradiol)151,386£182+72.9% ▲
15460£114+1.9% vs avg
151,200£4.6K+4.8% ▲
151,350£3.3K-1.5% vs avg
Enalapril maleate with diuretic14392£313+45.7% ▲
Valproic acid14840£303-83.9% ▼
Perampanel14392£1.9K-35.4% ▼
Cefaclor14810£115+318.6% ▲
Ofloxacin14396£473+70.4% ▲
Dutasteride14420£23-72.7% ▼
Specialist food replacer rice/cous cous (0913261)147,500£162+142.5% ▲
14160£360-46.0% ▼
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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.