HIGHFIELD SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: B86004 | LEEDS, LS16 7RX

Showing results 351-400 of 570

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Metronidazole371,050£311-1.5% vs avg
Prucalopride361,372£663-7.5% ▼
Bezafibrate361,340£188-33.2% ▼
361,502£1.3K+29.4% ▲
Codeine phosphate3513.6K£269+143.8% ▲
Carmellose sodium352,790£424-46.0% ▼
Menthol3517.8K£630+24.3% ▲
35911£585+34.3% ▲
Terbutaline sulphate3443£339-37.3% ▼
Metoclopramide hydrochloride346,343£520-59.0% ▼
Powder thickener - starch based (0913161)3412.5K£342+136.7% ▲
Mefenamic acid341,930£370-24.7% ▼
Azelastine hydrochloride34528£402+186.0% ▲
34800£3.6K-24.8% ▼
Enoxaparin33651£4.3K+61.0% ▲
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913011)33217.3K£1.9K-45.7% ▼
Travoprost3395£93-30.0% ▼
Chlorhexidine gluconate3315.5K£155+50.3% ▲
Sodium picosulfate3213.7K£1.2K-11.8% ▼
Ursodeoxycholic acid325,066£643-51.6% ▼
Erythromycin ethylsuccinate326,300£411+37.1% ▲
Duloxetine hydrochloride321,799£315-37.6% ▼
Tacrolimus324,350£6.4K+19.6% ▲
Alfacalcidol321,770£280-74.1% ▼
Permethrin322,340£730-15.1% ▼
32835£719-53.3% ▼
321,420£3.3K-5.2% ▼
Salicylic acid31260£152+145.2% ▲
Midazolam hydrochloride31331£183-24.3% ▼
317,720£420-69.5% ▼
Nicotine301,328£803-46.9% ▼
Metoprolol tartrate291,043£791-42.8% ▼
Acamprosate calcium294,599£523-16.7% ▼
Fosfomycin trometamol2937£171+1.9% vs avg
Sodium bicarbonate293,584£163-68.6% ▼
Sodium chloride291,260£829-2.5% ▼
Pimecrolimus29900£562+71.3% ▲
Hydrogen peroxide29725£223+632.9% ▲
2978£296-6.5% ▼
29720£3.2K+146.9% ▲
Glycopyrronium bromide286,270£11.4K+36.4% ▲
Amisulpride281,788£364-60.2% ▼
Naratriptan hydrochloride28334£63+7.1% ▲
Primidone282,664£3.2K-21.3% ▼
Biphasic insulin aspart28210£1.3K-72.4% ▼
Combined ethinylestradiol 20mcg281,526£796-46.4% ▼
Fluorometholone28205£64+94.4% ▲
28505£633+155.7% ▲
Pioglitazone hydrochloride271,848£75-69.5% ▼
Phenytoin sodium261,092£164-67.8% ▼
← Back to HIGHFIELD 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.