CRANHAM VILLAGE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 12

Practice Code: F82006 | UPMINSTER, RM14 1BJ

Showing results 551-600 of 639

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Sodium cromoglicate16311£67-82.8% ▼
Tafluprost and timolol16480£232-16.6% ▼
16250£563+1.9% vs avg
16160£426-66.5% ▼
16304£137-79.3% ▼
16380£1.2K+98.4% ▲
16780£3.9K+37.8% ▲
16480£2.3K+35.1% ▲
Zinc oxide15598£72-27.5% ▼
Promazine hydrochloride15532£274-71.6% ▼
Midazolam hydrochloride1564£1.5K+4.1% ▲
Valaciclovir15290£358+6.7% ▲
Tamsulosin and dutasteride hydrochloride15750£199-57.1% ▼
Triamcinolone acetonide1515£105+46.4% ▲
Aciclovir1562£59+21.7% ▲
1554£130-38.1% ▼
151,230£3.1K+45.8% ▲
15550£2.1K-42.0% ▼
15523£1.2K+59.6% ▲
Mometasone/glycopyrronium/indacaterol14420£592-7.6% ▼
Dexamfetamine sulfate14600£796-61.1% ▼
Propylthiouracil141,204£121+11.4% ▲
Calcium carbonate14512£44-78.7% ▼
Pyridoxine hydrochloride14196£83-34.9% ▼
Powder 1 - 2.2 kcal/ml soup (0913011)14448£387+82.3% ▲
RtS 1.5 - 1.6 kcal/ml milkshake higher protein (0913011)14121.1K£1.3K-25.2% ▼
Powder micronutrient supplement (0913291)141,780£788+76.1% ▲
Other toiletry preparations145,150£69-67.2% ▼
14205£73-86.3% ▼
145,000£72-17.1% ▼
14420£1.3K+80.3% ▲
Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake higher volume (0913011)1378.5K£480-35.7% ▼
Pyridostigmine bromide132,600£211-24.1% ▼
Salicylic acid13111£35+2.8% ▲
Eflornithine monohydrate chloride13780£703+85.0% ▲
13275£190-65.0% ▼
1313£144+30.0% ▲
13930£447+4.2% ▲
134,012£191+60.5% ▲
13630£1.6K-14.7% ▼
Mebeverine hydrochloride compound preparations12716£623+6.1% ▲
Sucralfate121,336£1.7K+42.9% ▲
Prednisolone sodium metasulphobenzoate1215£4.6K+203.8% ▲
Propafenone hydrochloride121,026£97+10.8% ▲
Levocetirizine12450£58-23.0% ▼
Alimemazine tartrate121,200£2.0K-7.2% ▼
Naratriptan hydrochloride12120£23-54.1% ▼
Riluzole12672£3.4K+15.6% ▲
Indoramin121,920£1.7K-21.1% ▼
Tube feed additive 0.5 kcal/ml high fibre liquid (0914052)1221.3K£744+24.5% ▲
← Back to CRANHAM VILLAGE 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.