DANEBURY AVENUE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 5

Practice Code: H85067 | LONDON, SW15 4DU

Showing results 201-250 of 363

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Dulaglutide45288£5.3K-60.7% ▼
Glyceryl trinitrate4449£113-81.4% ▼
Fluticasone/umeclidinium/vilanterol4455£2.3K-81.2% ▼
Tadalafil44832£153-74.1% ▼
Dexamethasone44220£137-74.4% ▼
Progesterone422,780£568-90.0% ▼
Dorzolamide421,310£540-49.5% ▼
Trimethoprim41904£56-79.9% ▼
Biphasic insulin aspart41280£1.7K-59.6% ▼
Mirabegron412,372£2.2K-89.8% ▼
Mometasone furoate412,310£212-69.3% ▼
Olopatadine40265£264-8.8% ▼
Hydrocortisone acetate401,290£246-39.4% ▼
Ondansetron hydrochloride391,207£391-19.6% ▼
395,800£181-85.9% ▼
Lorazepam38630£88-73.3% ▼
Phenytoin sodium384,256£709-52.9% ▼
Timolol and bimatoprost38513£788-75.0% ▼
Brimonidine tartrate37225£114-7.3% ▼
Carbimazole362,484£416-68.1% ▼
Powder extensively hydrolysed formula (0913101)3664.4K£1.8K-50.0% ▼
Clotrimazole362,360£136-62.9% ▼
Tranexamic acid352,700£177-58.7% ▼
355,876£310-83.8% ▼
Enalapril maleate333,360£150-81.6% ▼
Adrenaline3375£4.4K-47.7% ▼
Codeine phosphate332,398£69-95.4% ▼
Urea3312.3K£406-50.6% ▼
3316.5K£212-63.8% ▼
Norethisterone322,262£374-34.0% ▼
Other compound vitamin/mineral formulation preparations32436£64-0.2% vs avg
Baclofen322,130£53-84.0% ▼
Hypromellose32470£125-75.9% ▼
Benzoyl peroxide and clindamycin phosphate322,250£865-52.3% ▼
Loperamide hydrochloride311,884£454-86.7% ▼
Paroxetine hydrochloride311,420£52-83.4% ▼
Dexamethasone311,390£746-48.1% ▼
Propylthiouracil29980£98+130.8% ▲
Carmellose sodium292,100£210-55.2% ▼
Calcipotriol292,550£1.5K-83.0% ▼
2828£31-87.3% ▼
2810.5K£2.1K+98.2% ▲
Umeclidinium bromide/vilanterol2742£1.3K-86.2% ▼
Prochlorperazine maleate271,401£72-86.6% ▼
Travoprost27105£67-42.7% ▼
Olmesartan medoxomil26728£26-62.3% ▼
Timolol26830£201-70.6% ▼
Tacrolimus26900£717-51.8% ▼
Nystatin25750£43-75.2% ▼
2512.5K£1.8K-36.4% ▼
← Back to DANEBURY AVENUE 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.