GREY GABLE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 7

Practice Code: Y03602 | WORCESTER, WR7 4BW

Showing results 301-350 of 532

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Letrozole501,422£1.2K-73.2% ▼
Valsartan491,358£857-16.8% ▼
Umeclidinium bromide4949£1.2K-20.5% ▼
Rasagiline mesilate491,372£897+31.9% ▲
Ciprofloxacin49827£77+22.9% ▲
Ketoprofen494,600£221+36.6% ▲
483,910£13.1K+27.7% ▲
Exemestane471,182£554+44.6% ▲
476,905£355-83.0% ▼
Nicorandil462,370£320-68.0% ▼
Isophane insulin46224£867-56.4% ▼
Biphasic insulin aspart46280£1.5K-54.7% ▼
Latanoprost and timolol46713£518-39.8% ▼
Ivabradine452,072£224-52.7% ▼
Brivaracetam456,460£5.8K+32.3% ▲
Metronidazole451,930£711+19.7% ▲
Other individually formulated bought in preparations441,330£629+34.7% ▲
Glycerol43675£151+22.6% ▲
Pizotifen malate432,996£134-47.8% ▼
434,218£7.6K+143.9% ▲
Desloratadine421,606£134+45.6% ▲
Ipratropium bromide4244£314+159.0% ▲
Prednisolone41786£81-43.0% ▼
Medroxyprogesterone acetate413,068£672+7.1% ▲
4180£208+47.4% ▲
Metronidazole40765£37-39.1% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913011)40248.8K£2.0K-34.2% ▼
Pyridostigmine bromide408,000£720+133.7% ▲
Metoprolol tartrate392,044£208-23.1% ▼
Levocetirizine391,170£167+150.3% ▲
Pioglitazone hydrochloride391,120£47-55.9% ▼
Travoprost39180£206-17.2% ▼
Carmellose sodium392,250£332-39.8% ▼
391,628£712-43.1% ▼
Dexamethasone381,658£102+21.9% ▲
Dulaglutide37149£2.5K-67.7% ▼
Ursodeoxycholic acid364,030£1.0K-45.6% ▼
Glycopyrronium bromide361,080£880-3.4% ▼
Zolpidem tartrate361,137£55-60.0% ▼
Dutasteride361,074£197-29.9% ▼
Sodium fluoride364,934£223+8.5% ▲
Powder thickener - gum based (0913161)368,031£511-52.1% ▼
Terbinafine hydrochloride361,305£253-3.0% ▼
Neomycin sulfate35540£64-41.0% ▼
3551£6.1K-2.0% ▼
Entacapone343,780£862+123.0% ▲
Goserelin acetate3434£5.6K-22.8% ▼
Tafluprost341,380£499+83.4% ▲
Olmesartan medoxomil/amlodipine33900£498+150.2% ▲
Valproic acid331,590£536-62.1% ▼
← Back to GREY GABLE 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.