CUMBERLAND HOUSE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 12

Practice Code: N81062 | MACCLESFIELD, SK11 6JL

Showing results 551-600 of 707

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Tizanidine hydrochloride221,183£71-16.9% ▼
Mometasone furoate/olopatadine hydrochloride2222£279+102.5% ▲
Other individually formulated bought in preparations22258£48-32.7% ▼
22745£370-26.4% ▼
Prucalopride211,036£408-46.1% ▼
Minoxidil21540£101+88.4% ▲
Midodrine hydrochloride211,692£385-56.9% ▼
Tinzaparin sodium21423£3.1K+41.8% ▲
Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake higher volume (0913011)21155.3K£944+3.8% ▲
Ipratropium bromide2124£178+29.5% ▲
Tars216,000£378+150.6% ▲
211,470£1.3K-48.2% ▼
Acamprosate calcium202,912£327-42.6% ▼
Ferrous gluconate20763£21-58.2% ▼
Other phosphate supplement preparations20640£121+227.8% ▲
20525.0K£9.9K+120.6% ▲
Indometacin201,456£95+27.1% ▲
Mupirocin2096£129+70.4% ▲
Zinc oxide201,720£74-0.5% vs avg
Adapalene20900£312-8.6% ▼
2042£251-40.8% ▼
20151£303+47.2% ▲
Clonidine hydrochloride192,576£243-64.4% ▼
Diclofenac sodium19628£176-62.6% ▼
Hydrocortisone butyrate191,900£101+187.0% ▲
Terbinafine hydrochloride19675£123-48.8% ▼
191,630£239-40.2% ▼
191,560£4.5K+61.4% ▲
Salmeterol1822£550-25.2% ▼
Amantadine hydrochloride181,372£349-35.4% ▼
Erythromycin18876£204-48.0% ▼
Diethylstilbestrol18189£676+177.2% ▲
Powder thickener - starch based (0913161)182,835£80+25.3% ▲
18185£509+81.5% ▲
1831£232+190.3% ▲
18360£2.0K+105.7% ▲
Phosphates (Rectal)17149£646+39.1% ▲
Glyceryl trinitrate17570£710+28.0% ▲
Varenicline tartrate17712£765+71.7% ▲
Levofloxacin17278£309+229.8% ▲
Denosumab1717£3.1K-37.5% ▼
171,180£301+79.4% ▲
17460£2.2K+38.6% ▲
17760£5.2K+34.1% ▲
Oxazepam161,120£133-24.9% ▼
Safinamide16480£1.0K-20.6% ▼
Combined ethinylestradiol 35mcg161,554£90+28.4% ▲
Other compound vitamin/mineral formulation preparations16818£84-50.1% ▼
Fluocinolone acetonide161,310£152+46.9% ▲
Tioconazole16312£609+240.0% ▲
← Back to CUMBERLAND HOUSE 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.