MALTINGS SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 10

Practice Code: E82031 | ST ALBANS, AL1 3JB

Showing results 451-500 of 629

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ketoconazole291,080£145+191.5% ▲
Ursodeoxycholic acid285,040£1.7K-57.7% ▼
Erythromycin283,038£1.4K-19.2% ▼
Ciprofloxacin28150£134+252.3% ▲
Mupirocin28120£161+138.5% ▲
Crotamiton284,460£253+68.4% ▲
28367£819+182.4% ▲
Glyceryl trinitrate27810£1.0K+103.2% ▲
Cinnarizine274,060£183-42.3% ▼
Colistimethate sodium271,800£4.4K+138.8% ▲
Tacrolimus272,700£3.4K+1.0% vs avg
Other compound vitamin/mineral formulation preparations271,444£123-15.8% ▼
Sodium chloride271,480£989-9.2% ▼
Cocois273,120£494+96.6% ▲
27425£758-17.1% ▼
Hydralazine hydrochloride262,072£117-38.4% ▼
Isosorbide dinitrate261,092£324+44.6% ▲
Orlistat261,932£457-68.5% ▼
Pizotifen malate261,064£44-68.5% ▼
Levodopa/carbidopa/entacapone264,200£2.4K-7.0% ▼
Anastrozole261,456£55-71.4% ▼
Phosphates (Rectal)25295£2.0K+104.5% ▲
Colestyramine251,598£566-13.2% ▼
Magnesium citrate251,754£1.4K+245.8% ▲
Erythromycin251,280£561+84.1% ▲
251,140£1.8K+35.8% ▲
25202£338+51.5% ▲
251,260£2.6K+76.7% ▲
Colesevelam hydrochloride244,680£1.8K-36.7% ▼
Nefopam hydrochloride244,338£191-78.8% ▼
Rasagiline mesilate241,092£665-35.4% ▼
Drospirenone242,772£461+272.9% ▲
Brinzolamide/brimonidine24200£351-30.0% ▼
Ipratropium bromide2430£205+48.0% ▲
Emollient bath and shower preparations2410.7K£149-61.8% ▼
243,501£256-51.4% ▼
Dabigatran etexilate232,400£1.9K-55.6% ▼
Umeclidinium bromide2334£889-62.7% ▼
Midazolam maleate2352£2.4K+376.7% ▲
Pyridoxine hydrochloride232,056£886+7.0% ▲
23510£1.1K-42.3% ▼
Chlorpromazine hydrochloride22931£568-44.1% ▼
Tibolone221,596£168-28.1% ▼
Indometacin22910£175+39.8% ▲
22335£1.1K+220.3% ▲
Zonisamide215,180£3.2K-51.9% ▼
Combined ethinylestradiol 35mcg212,961£197+68.5% ▲
Betamethasone sodium phosphate21310£69-18.9% ▼
Emulsifying wax2112.0K£86+72.4% ▲
21255£459+91.8% ▲
← Back to MALTINGS 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.