MAYPOLE HEALTH SURGERY Y — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 5

Practice Code: M85179 | BIRMINGHAM, B14 5DJ

Showing results 201-250 of 478

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Risedronate sodium79340£91-34.9% ▼
Erythromycin774,002£1.5K+122.3% ▲
Trospium chloride773,102£1.5K+50.8% ▲
Cyclizine hydrochloride744,231£146-54.1% ▼
741,180£3.8K+250.0% ▲
Terbutaline sulphate7373£577+34.6% ▲
728,653£632-10.5% ▼
Melatonin713,246£767-78.6% ▼
Benzoyl peroxide and clindamycin phosphate703,510£1.4K+4.4% ▲
70770£253-66.5% ▼
Clobetasone butyrate694,485£456-66.2% ▼
Coal tar6923.5K£476-5.2% ▼
Carbimazole682,892£219-39.8% ▼
Eplerenone672,324£287-74.7% ▼
Valproic acid672,430£449-23.0% ▼
Metoprolol tartrate664,214£497+30.1% ▲
Colchicine662,366£48-15.4% ▼
66402£947+173.0% ▲
Topiramate644,806£298-64.0% ▼
Baclofen648,478£202-68.1% ▼
Other toiletry preparations6434.1K£766+49.8% ▲
642,231£636+29.5% ▲
Cefalexin632,497£164-45.8% ▼
Metronidazole63976£57-4.1% ▼
Other multivitamin preparations631,824£464-63.5% ▼
Diclofenac diethyl636,300£321-82.3% ▼
Carmellose sodium633,600£477-2.8% ▼
Benzydamine hydrochloride633,060£191-18.5% ▼
Dosulepin hydrochloride621,757£349+9.5% ▲
Lymecycline613,038£349-49.3% ▼
Biphasic insulin lispro61581£3.6K+42.1% ▲
Tirzepatide6163£6.1K-68.6% ▼
Tamoxifen citrate612,894£228-25.9% ▼
6133.0K£342-33.1% ▼
61670£2.2K+98.5% ▲
Letrozole60686£72-67.9% ▼
Hydrocortisone591,440£386-22.3% ▼
Travoprost59358£228+25.2% ▲
Tranexamic acid582,968£212-31.6% ▼
Zolmitriptan58875£4.8K-10.7% ▼
Pizotifen malate581,736£81-29.6% ▼
Co-amoxiclav (Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid)581,501£171-62.0% ▼
Fluticasone propionate/azelastine hydrochloride (Nasal)5757£802-49.7% ▼
Pancreatin5614.6K£4.0K-49.6% ▼
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate552,300£105-71.6% ▼
Hydrocortisone544,460£490-36.0% ▼
Fentanyl53515£1.1K-48.3% ▼
Isophane insulin53257£1.1K-49.8% ▼
Fluticasone propionate (Nasal)531,259£923-63.6% ▼
5354£230+3.3% ▲
← Back to MAYPOLE HEALTH SURGERY Y
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.