HIGH STREET SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 5

Practice Code: E82133 | WALTHAM CROSS, EN8 0BX

Showing results 201-250 of 541

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Estriol1031,133£3.6K-51.6% ▼
Glyceryl trinitrate102130£313-56.9% ▼
Ibuprofen1026,549£138-16.3% ▼
10251.2K£634-61.3% ▼
Travoprost101438£277+114.3% ▲
Prednisolone992,178£243+37.6% ▲
Azithromycin982,256£645-22.7% ▼
9797£4.3K-68.8% ▼
Carbimazole975,564£552-14.1% ▼
9716.6K£1.6K+101.2% ▲
Ispaghula husk963,970£712-27.1% ▼
Co-careldopa (Carbidopa/levodopa)9416.3K£1.4K-58.4% ▼
Methocarbamol944,156£276+96.4% ▲
Clobetasol propionate933,895£314-31.8% ▼
Vortioxetine92959£911+32.6% ▲
Theophylline905,712£2.9K+7.6% ▲
Nystatin903,180£182-10.7% ▼
Dulaglutide90360£6.6K-21.5% ▼
Phenytoin sodium894,340£506+10.2% ▲
Erythromycin ethylsuccinate899,640£846+281.2% ▲
8815.3K£490+26.1% ▲
Lidocaine hydrochloride86493£262-50.2% ▼
869,800£529-34.4% ▼
Fluticasone propionate/azelastine hydrochloride (Nasal)8590£1.3K-25.1% ▼
857,637£750+5.7% ▲
Pramipexole843,256£233-14.4% ▼
Metronidazole831,356£91+26.3% ▲
Sulfasalazine829,128£3.9K-37.0% ▼
Beclometasone dipropionate8183£239-62.3% ▼
8140.0K£288-11.2% ▼
Vitamin B compound803,784£113-42.6% ▼
Hepatitis A8080£1.5K+5.4% ▲
Eplerenone792,072£256-70.2% ▼
Powder 1.6 kcal/ml milkshake (0913011)7922.8K£1.3K+6.0% ▲
Etoricoxib791,176£260-1.9% vs avg
Mometasone furoate773,570£442-42.4% ▼
Chlorphenamine maleate768,096£201-31.1% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake (0913011)75392.2K£2.6K-47.2% ▼
Ketoconazole7511.3K£1.7K-23.6% ▼
Typhoid7474£766-17.8% ▼
Nebivolol733,220£2.5K-31.1% ▼
Co-amoxiclav (Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid)732,520£216-52.2% ▼
Benzydamine hydrochloride737,590£223-5.6% ▼
Tranexamic acid714,185£274-16.2% ▼
Hypromellose71900£156-46.4% ▼
Trazodone hydrochloride691,864£58-66.2% ▼
Cinnarizine695,818£264+47.5% ▲
Aciclovir692,561£121-53.6% ▼
Fluticasone furoate6877£488-64.9% ▼
Bezafibrate671,758£213+24.4% ▲
← Back to HIGH STREET 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.