HIGH STREET SURGERY, EPPING — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 7

Practice Code: F81072 | EPPING, CM16 4DA

Showing results 301-350 of 517

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Dexamfetamine sulfate392,632£3.0K+8.5% ▲
Eletriptan39376£1.3K+295.0% ▲
Combined ethinylestradiol 20mcg395,286£745-25.3% ▼
Goserelin acetate3939£3.9K-11.5% ▼
Specialist food replacer pasta (0913261)3939.0K£1.2K+164.8% ▲
Baclofen394,802£133-80.5% ▼
Olopatadine39215£219-11.1% ▼
Testosterone382,323£1.4K-50.2% ▼
Triptorelin3838£7.3K+80.2% ▲
RtS 2-2.4 kcal/ml m/sk higher protein,higher energy(0913011)38370.0K£4.6K-13.1% ▼
38380£278+283.2% ▲
382,250£112-30.0% ▼
Pioglitazone hydrochloride371,456£69-58.2% ▼
Calcium carbonate372,692£225-43.8% ▼
Etoricoxib371,512£304-54.1% ▼
Neomycin sulfate37555£70-37.6% ▼
Ibuprofen362,392£62-70.5% ▼
Telmisartan351,596£184-39.6% ▼
Theophylline351,932£977-58.1% ▼
Hydroxyzine hydrochloride352,128£50-34.3% ▼
Domperidone352,791£57-1.9% vs avg
Metoclopramide hydrochloride352,948£94-57.8% ▼
Insulin glulisine35175£991+63.2% ▲
Biphasic isophane insulin35190£825-68.6% ▼
Exemestane351,104£179+7.7% ▲
Diclofenac sodium352,000£1.5K+46.0% ▲
35330£514+25.8% ▲
Dicycloverine hydrochloride343,190£3.3K+187.2% ▲
Bisacodyl341,106£110-74.1% ▼
Glucose342,575£183-34.6% ▼
Fusidic acid34170£670+229.1% ▲
Urea346,300£288-49.1% ▼
Coal tar348,175£168-53.3% ▼
34219£251+5.1% ▲
342,856£215-52.9% ▼
Duloxetine hydrochloride331,484£249-35.6% ▼
Other multivitamin preparations33888£163-80.9% ▼
33206£94-10.9% ▼
33329£1.1K+7.4% ▲
Travoprost32123£184-32.1% ▼
Bezafibrate311,181£287-42.4% ▼
Lithium carbonate311,430£224-75.6% ▼
Rasagiline mesilate31868£530-16.5% ▼
Methadone hydrochloride318,680£85-96.7% ▼
Azathioprine311,536£34-71.4% ▼
3182£324+0.0% vs avg
Ondansetron hydrochloride304,230£1.9K-38.2% ▼
Rifaximin301,946£9.0K+11.7% ▲
Desmopressin acetate301,650£1.4K-42.5% ▼
Methylprednisolone acetate3031£189-74.0% ▼
← Back to HIGH STREET SURGERY, EPPING
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.