MORRIS HOUSE GROUP PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 11

Practice Code: F85019 | LONDON, N17 6AA

Showing results 501-550 of 652

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ketorolac trometamol21140£140+126.3% ▲
217,400£1.1K-46.1% ▼
Torasemide20756£299+78.1% ▲
Fludroxycortide2038£981+89.7% ▲
Other camouflage preparations201,800£534+109.4% ▲
Ketoconazole20660£89+101.0% ▲
20328£498-46.1% ▼
201,270£2.7K-49.9% ▼
204,358£135-59.9% ▼
202,420£592+122.4% ▲
205,050£1.0K+173.7% ▲
Sodium picosulfate199,280£821-47.7% ▼
Labetalol hydrochloride192,184£349-16.3% ▼
Lacidipine19938£90-84.1% ▼
Rufinamide197,004£5.1K+10.7% ▲
Levodopa/carbidopa/entacapone195,964£3.9K-32.1% ▼
Erythromycin19763£277-45.2% ▼
Hydrocortisone sodium succinate1955£60+398.8% ▲
Powder 2.3 - 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake lower volume (0913011)19378£205-26.0% ▼
Betamethasone sodium phosphate19190£42-26.7% ▼
Fluocinolone acetonide191,420£172+74.5% ▲
19185£47-34.4% ▼
19920£732-42.6% ▼
192,160£344+82.6% ▲
Linaclotide18616£785-1.5% vs avg
Captopril182,128£658+24.4% ▲
Telmisartan with diuretic181,036£331+59.2% ▲
Naratriptan hydrochloride18162£32-31.2% ▼
Acarbose18413£115+54.2% ▲
Specialist food replacer bread (0913271)1873.3K£687-58.5% ▼
Tube feed 1.5 kcal/ml peptide based (0914032)18645.0K£15.1K+87.7% ▲
Pyridostigmine bromide185,000£398+5.2% ▲
Brimonidine tart (Rosacea)18540£576+248.6% ▲
Diclofenac sodium18950£692-24.9% ▼
183,420£269+6.5% ▲
18180£284-45.2% ▼
182,236£230+123.4% ▲
Sodium chloride171,620£462+103.5% ▲
Powder preterm infant formula (0913111)1754.4K£858+6.7% ▲
Febuxostat17896£69-54.5% ▼
Clindamycin/tretinoin17870£329+44.8% ▲
Midazolam hydrochloride17170£92-58.5% ▼
1718£357-75.2% ▼
173,200£989+231.6% ▲
Methyldopa162,464£522-6.1% ▼
Chloral hydrate161,600£2.6K+58.0% ▲
Zuclopenthixol hydrochloride163,200£245-49.3% ▼
Zolmitriptan16386£1.3K-75.4% ▼
Itraconazole16352£143+19.3% ▲
Dapoxetine hydrochloride1666£336+248.5% ▲
← Back to MORRIS HOUSE GROUP PRACTICE
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.