CARTERKNOWLE & DORE MEDICAL PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 12

Practice Code: C88016 | SHEFFIELD, S7 2DW

Showing results 551-600 of 672

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Fluocinonide171,550£196+314.0% ▲
Permethrin17870£239-54.9% ▼
171,020£1.7K-3.6% ▼
173,035£130-83.3% ▼
Propantheline bromide16980£675+23.3% ▲
Lacidipine16448£35-86.6% ▼
Almotriptan16111£241+29.1% ▲
Ofloxacin16405£497+94.7% ▲
Glucagon1619£527+5.2% ▲
Deflazacort16880£222+81.3% ▲
Heparinoid161,460£88-39.0% ▼
16263£1.2K-59.3% ▼
16260£378+65.6% ▲
Simeticone151,172£123+173.6% ▲
Lormetazepam15420£137+27.4% ▲
Powder 1.4 - 1.6 kcal/ml milkshake with fibre (0913011)15728£586+83.7% ▲
Powder extensively hydrolysed formula (0913101)1533.6K£927-79.2% ▼
Benzoyl peroxide15760£125+6.4% ▲
1539£104+87.6% ▲
15113£253-38.1% ▼
15750£76+106.1% ▲
Co-dydramol (Dihydrocodeine/paracetamol)142,102£100-92.2% ▼
Opicapone14420£826-26.9% ▼
Glucose141,070£94-73.1% ▼
Mercaptopurine14784£348-9.6% ▼
Sodium chloride14790£255+67.6% ▲
Calcium carbonate141,116£144-78.7% ▼
Vitamin E14376£35+28.8% ▲
Ready to serve infant formula, high energy (0913104)14176.3K£2.6K+26.7% ▲
RtS 3.3 kcal/ml energy and higher protein liquid (0913141)141,303£2.6K+101.7% ▲
Specialist food replacer cake mix (0913261)144,750£80+115.0% ▲
Liquid OTC glucose for diabetic hypo treatment (0913541)145,220£81-38.9% ▼
Tube feed 1 kcal/ml with fibre (0914021)14267.3K£6.1K+50.7% ▲
Brimonidine tartrate14130£62-64.9% ▼
Fluocinolone acetonide141,360£203+28.6% ▲
Fluticasone propionate (Topical)14420£57+289.1% ▲
Fludroxycortide1414£321+32.8% ▲
Other individually formulated bought in preparations141,058£98-57.1% ▼
1420£282-57.3% ▼
1450£1.4K+172.8% ▲
1434£544+186.9% ▲
141,150£3.9K-42.5% ▼
14700£62+120.2% ▲
14290£946+19.2% ▲
143,340£467+6.1% ▲
14430£3.0K+10.4% ▲
Chlortalidone13195£375+31.8% ▲
Co-tenidone (Atenolol/chlortalidone)13364£67-37.7% ▼
Nadolol13182£122+28.6% ▲
Minoxidil13728£184+16.6% ▲
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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.