EVEREST HOUSE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: E82051 | HEMEL HEMPSTEAD, HP2 4HY

Showing results 351-400 of 624

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Anastrozole532,408£91-41.8% ▼
Other individually formulated bought in preparations533,610£1.1K+62.2% ▲
Sulpiride522,912£788+94.2% ▲
Ondansetron hydrochloride511,764£585+5.1% ▲
Erythromycin ethylsuccinate515,828£971+118.4% ▲
Theophylline502,240£1.1K-40.2% ▼
Naratriptan hydrochloride50444£85+91.2% ▲
Triptorelin5050£10.2K+137.0% ▲
Zolmitriptan49414£1.2K-24.5% ▼
Etoricoxib492,240£966-39.2% ▼
Metronidazole491,715£683+30.4% ▲
4949£114+51.2% ▲
493,948£204-1.8% vs avg
Oxytetracycline484,459£1.8K+85.8% ▲
Hydrocortisone484,082£227-43.2% ▼
48650£317+11.3% ▲
482,670£504+175.0% ▲
Glucose473,605£296-9.6% ▼
Tacrolimus461,500£1.2K-14.7% ▼
Propafenone hydrochloride452,982£284+315.6% ▲
Meloxicam452,850£75-32.0% ▼
451,240£861+14.2% ▲
45712£3.5K+112.9% ▲
45450£54+55.4% ▲
451,360£473+101.5% ▲
Alverine citrate444,804£292+6.3% ▲
Metoprolol tartrate441,204£548-13.3% ▼
Pizotifen malate443,276£132-46.6% ▼
Betamethasone esters445,050£526-27.1% ▼
Sennosides4212.9K£246+36.0% ▲
Aclidinium bromide/formoterol4256£1.7K+19.5% ▲
Erythromycin421,998£670+21.2% ▲
Timolol42640£219-52.5% ▼
Umeclidinium bromide4141£1.1K-33.5% ▼
Fesoterodine fumarate411,596£136+3.9% ▲
Calcium carbonate412,544£249-37.7% ▼
Chlorhexidine gluconate4116.9K£309+38.8% ▲
Ipratropium bromide40356£276+39.2% ▲
Sodium feredetate4017.8K£506+39.7% ▲
40742£2.3K+161.0% ▲
40708£1.9K+22.8% ▲
Moxonidine391,722£278-29.9% ▼
Tablets/capsules micronutrient supplement (0913282)391,513£1.1K+272.4% ▲
Pneumococcal3939£603+1,357.3% ▲
Balsalazide sodium389,619£2.1K+155.1% ▲
Sevelamer387,424£1.2K+73.4% ▲
Ciclosporin (Eye Anti Inflammatory)381,770£4.2K+53.2% ▲
Hyoscine hydrobromide371,433£232+8.4% ▲
Potassium chloride372,580£264+97.9% ▲
Powder 1.6 kcal/ml milkshake (0913011)371,768£922-50.4% ▼
← Back to EVEREST 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.