CHURCH VIEW SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications

Practice Code: F81125 | HOCKLEY, SS5 4PZ

Over the last 12 months, CHURCH VIEW SURGERY prescribed 237,038 items across 633 different medications at a total cost of £2,956,794 to the NHS. Below is the complete list of all medications prescribed, sorted by volume.

MedicationItems (12m) ↑QuantityCostvs National
Prednisolone sodium metasulphobenzoate1028£8.9K+153.2% ▲
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake (0913021)1056.0K£1.2K-6.3% ▼
Powder thickener - starch based (0913161)104,725£122-30.4% ▼
Tizanidine hydrochloride101,560£100-62.2% ▼
Acetazolamide101,260£48-53.8% ▼
Apraclonidine1050£103-20.6% ▼
10313£174-26.8% ▼
10180£223-45.4% ▼
10900£430+103.6% ▲
10300£113-32.0% ▼
105,115£83-40.8% ▼
10100£272-79.1% ▼
10110£180+52.6% ▲
10500£115-74.6% ▼
10420£811-51.2% ▼
101,200£2.3K+14.1% ▲
Cimetidine11600£54-41.0% ▼
Temazepam11356£314-80.8% ▼
Citalopram hydrochloride11330£225-31.5% ▼
Meptazinol hydrochloride111,232£231-66.7% ▼
Almotriptan1166£144-11.3% ▼
Alogliptin/metformin111,232£556-73.6% ▼
Estradiol valerate111,092£91-43.7% ▼
Oestrogens conjugated with progestogen111,428£551+54.4% ▲
Vardenafil11128£125-21.2% ▼
Sodium fluoride11561£68-66.8% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake with fibre (0913021)11123.2K£3.3K-20.3% ▼
Pyridostigmine bromide112,400£183-35.7% ▼
Heparinoid111,625£89-58.1% ▼
Timolol and brimonidine1155£112-21.6% ▼
Pilocarpine hydrochloride11812£379+2.4% ▲
Menthol113,500£130-60.9% ▼
Mupirocin11165£84+18.5% ▲
11110£262-75.0% ▼
1136£215-69.2% ▼
11590£33-79.7% ▼
11160£431+74.4% ▲
111,500£222-37.0% ▼
Trihexyphenidyl hydrochloride121,008£46-57.7% ▼
Procyclidine hydrochloride121,624£72-91.5% ▼
Mebendazole12313£18+4.8% ▲
Prasterone12560£303+81.8% ▲
Cabergoline12120£297-22.6% ▼
Riboflavin121,344£2.9K+29.8% ▲
Ready to serve 1 - 1.3 kcal/ml m/sk lower energy (0913011)1230.3K£403+72.2% ▲
12121£508+43.7% ▲
1216£38-63.0% ▼
1246£435+0.8% vs avg
12115£4.2K+116.8% ▲
12360£672-26.5% ▼
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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.