LCD WAKEFIELD WIC — All Prescriptions & Medications

Practice Code: Y02509 | WAKEFIELD, WF1 2SN

Over the last 12 months, LCD WAKEFIELD WIC prescribed 17,534 items across 103 different medications at a total cost of £68,884 to the NHS. Below is the complete list of all medications prescribed, sorted by volume.

MedicationItems (12m) ↑QuantityCostvs National
Hydrocortisone acetate10100£316+51.3% ▲
Mometasone furoate/olopatadine hydrochloride1010£127-8.0% ▼
Heparinoid10500£38-23.3% ▼
Emollient bath and shower preparations114,000£51-82.5% ▼
Clobetasol propionate11330£29-91.9% ▼
Calcipotriol11900£486-93.5% ▼
11130£544+27.9% ▲
Ofloxacin12296£284+46.0% ▲
Calamine121,400£25+58.3% ▲
Glycerol13144£26-62.9% ▼
Senna13584£12-97.8% ▼
Amlodipine13285£6-99.8% ▼
136,400£85-95.1% ▼
Mebendazole14339£18+22.3% ▲
14350£55-53.1% ▼
14445£97-82.6% ▼
Mometasone furoate15510£59-88.8% ▼
15127£352-4.4% ▼
15142£162+73.3% ▲
Tranexamic acid16548£37-81.1% ▼
Phenazone/lidocaine16240£136+56.4% ▲
Apixaban17102£10-98.7% ▼
Sodium cromoglicate17219£56-81.7% ▼
Hydrogen peroxide17425£131+329.7% ▲
Sumatriptan succinate18108£15-94.9% ▼
Urea186,550£243-73.1% ▼
Fusidic acid1995£349+83.9% ▲
Loratadine21846£21-89.9% ▼
2110.0K£76-77.0% ▼
Diazepam22217£7-95.6% ▼
Amitriptyline hydrochloride22357£9-99.0% ▼
Cyclizine hydrochloride22490£19-86.4% ▼
Ciprofloxacin23464£49-42.3% ▼
Terbinafine hydrochloride23379£80-38.0% ▼
23178£541-41.5% ▼
24250£29-36.2% ▼
Hyoscine butylbromide26834£61-88.8% ▼
29998£162-26.4% ▼
Hydrocortisone30699£169-60.5% ▼
Mometasone furoate3535£263-91.3% ▼
Pivmecillinam hydrochloride36465£243-31.4% ▼
Ulipristal acetate (Emergency Contraceptive)3838£508+779.7% ▲
Erythromycin391,316£510+12.6% ▲
Ciprofloxain/dexameth39205£239+27.0% ▲
Beclometasone dipropionate4040£108-81.4% ▼
Prednisolone41906£98-43.0% ▼
Metronidazole41814£50-37.6% ▼
Piroxicam412,668£70-28.6% ▼
Fluconazole42164£101-45.7% ▼
Fluticasone furoate4344£290-77.8% ▼
← Back to LCD WAKEFIELD WIC
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.