MILMAN & KENNET SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 11

Practice Code: K81040 | READING, RG2 0AR

Showing results 501-550 of 643

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake (0913021)19207.0K£5.1K+78.1% ▲
Pilocarpine hydrochloride19190£624+85.1% ▲
19670£37-65.0% ▼
Nitrazepam181,960£100-65.4% ▼
Amantadine hydrochloride181,008£251-35.4% ▼
Rivastigmine18758£449-73.8% ▼
Saxagliptin18700£751-46.1% ▼
Metformin hydrochloride/sitagliptin181,456£398-51.9% ▼
Mercaptopurine18486£207+16.2% ▲
Celecoxib18602£44-72.7% ▼
18800£2.7K-19.7% ▼
18610£3.4K+44.1% ▲
Zinc oxide17457£50-17.8% ▼
Finerenone17476£593+56.2% ▲
Zolpidem tartrate17959£40-81.1% ▼
Magnesium aspartate17708£638+12.3% ▲
Powder 10g protein equivalent (0913226)171,476£8.8K+47.1% ▲
Ciclosporin (Eye Anti Inflammatory)17630£1.5K-31.4% ▼
Cyclopentolate hydrochloride17190£307+197.2% ▲
Chlorhexidine gluconate175,100£37-22.6% ▼
Hepatitis B1717£151+60.6% ▲
17252£816-44.7% ▼
Budesonide161,359£2.1K+2.1% ▲
Sodium picosulfate163,600£288-55.9% ▼
Perindopril arginine16870£186+35.3% ▲
Enoxaparin16627£3.5K-21.9% ▼
Aspirin161,228£157+62.8% ▲
Rotigotine16483£1.4K-40.7% ▼
Nicotine16325£457-71.7% ▼
Betamethasone sodium phosphate16872£117+30.1% ▲
Oestrogens conjugated161,148£586-21.6% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913011)16207.6K£2.1K-73.7% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913021)16152.4K£3.7K+222.4% ▲
Aceclofenac16540£76+65.5% ▲
Apraclonidine1680£166+27.0% ▲
Ivermectin16750£436-24.7% ▼
16275£82-44.8% ▼
163,891£159-67.9% ▼
161,380£207-40.4% ▼
16920£3.3K-57.4% ▼
INR blood testing reagents15504£1.4K+99.1% ▲
Alimemazine tartrate153,748£4.0K+16.0% ▲
Trifluoperazine151,360£1.2K-0.6% vs avg
Oxytetracycline153,472£1.2K-41.9% ▼
Doxycycline monohydrate15562£310+38.1% ▲
Indometacin151,204£74-4.7% ▼
Amorolfine hydrochloride1595£123-35.0% ▼
1530£4.0K-58.0% ▼
15150£213+55.3% ▲
15630£362+41.0% ▲
← Back to MILMAN & KENNET 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.