CARTMEL SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 3

Practice Code: A82647 | GRANGE-OVER-SANDS, LA11 6PH

Showing results 101-150 of 481

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Lercanidipine hydrochloride1956,436£645-68.4% ▼
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate1856,996£329-4.5% ▼
Hyoscine butylbromide18419.6K£1.5K-21.0% ▼
Carbocisteine18447.1K£964-65.5% ▼
Desogestrel18115.6K£489-54.3% ▼
Ibuprofen17914.8K£384+46.9% ▲
178359£12.0K-67.3% ▼
Lamotrigine17710.6K£3.6K-70.0% ▼
Spironolactone1764,839£293-67.4% ▼
Methotrexate1763,184£3.4K-45.9% ▼
Betahistine hydrochloride17411.4K£398-27.1% ▼
Pantoprazole1736,132£288-37.1% ▼
Aciclovir1735,138£263+16.3% ▲
Perindopril erbumine1694,642£336-68.2% ▼
169738£1.5K+510.8% ▲
Thiamine hydrochloride16012.5K£326-69.6% ▼
16012.6K£949-26.0% ▼
Trimethoprim1572,476£189-23.2% ▼
Mesalazine (Systemic)15216.8K£5.1K-36.5% ▼
Senna1506,675£152-75.1% ▼
Levetiracetam15026.0K£2.3K-67.2% ▼
Bumetanide1467,683£757-46.4% ▼
Estriol1431,489£2.6K-32.8% ▼
Promethazine hydrochloride14218.5K£1.2K-60.3% ▼
13814.8K£512-50.1% ▼
Solifenacin1364,284£168-71.5% ▼
Quetiapine1358,408£2.5K-78.3% ▼
Tiotropium bromide1331,265£2.9K-56.3% ▼
Other emollient preparations13167.9K£846-78.2% ▼
Brinzolamide130790£602+0.1% vs avg
Pravastatin sodium1283,584£188-60.6% ▼
Umeclidinium bromide/vilanterol128128£3.8K-34.4% ▼
Diazepam1282,431£55-74.3% ▼
12818.0K£1.2K+26.0% ▲
Prochlorperazine maleate1275,846£453-37.2% ▼
Insulin aspart127661£4.0K-66.6% ▼
Hypromellose1271,570£349-4.2% ▼
Sodium valproate12620.6K£1.4K-60.4% ▼
Clarithromycin1262,928£591-48.6% ▼
Chlorphenamine maleate1246,574£172+12.3% ▲
Ferrous fumarate12013.0K£285-83.4% ▼
Carbamazepine11921.4K£1.1K-59.9% ▼
Tadalafil119784£170-30.0% ▼
Letrozole1193,528£343-36.3% ▼
Escitalopram1183,242£190-58.5% ▼
117198£154+1,079.9% ▲
Melatonin1168,310£3.8K-65.1% ▼
Carbomer 940/9801151,460£316-24.5% ▼
Glyceryl trinitrate114115£269-51.8% ▼
1142,129£1.1K+207.1% ▲
← Back to CARTMEL 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.