NEW ROAD SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 9

Practice Code: E82106 | RICKMANSWORTH, WD3 3HD

Showing results 401-450 of 639

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Cinnarizine382,907£136-18.8% ▼
38575£1.4K+46.7% ▲
382,840£2.0K+14.9% ▲
Insulin Lispro37250£1.8K-51.6% ▼
Etoricoxib371,498£451-54.1% ▼
Benzydamine hydrochloride376,330£144-52.2% ▼
Azelaic acid371,140£219+54.8% ▲
Other individually formulated bought in preparations37791£295+13.2% ▲
37680£1.1K+12.7% ▲
Colesevelam hydrochloride366,840£2.7K-5.1% ▼
Potassium chloride365,860£550+92.6% ▲
Sodium chloride368,576£779+52.1% ▲
Calcium carbonate362,466£256-45.3% ▼
362,460£187-48.4% ▼
36390£1.2K+17.2% ▲
Terbinafine hydrochloride351,215£229-5.7% ▼
Rotigotine341,081£3.7K+26.0% ▲
Tafluprost341,210£493+83.4% ▲
Ketoconazole341,050£141+241.8% ▲
34360£109-9.6% ▼
Lofepramine hydrochloride33518£227+10.3% ▲
Medroxyprogesterone acetate3336£198-72.7% ▼
Ciclosporin (Eye Anti Inflammatory)331,080£2.6K+33.1% ▲
332,040£6.8K-12.2% ▼
Entacapone322,682£548+109.9% ▲
Co-trimoxazole(Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole)32950£58-20.4% ▼
Biphasic insulin lispro32235£1.5K-25.5% ▼
Other compound vitamin/mineral formulation preparations321,298£111-0.2% vs avg
Methyldopa312,044£550+82.0% ▲
Anastrozole311,428£53-66.0% ▼
31367£1.1K+416.0% ▲
3170£439-13.3% ▼
Isosorbide dinitrate30940£169+66.8% ▲
Tiotropium bromide/olodaterol3036£1.1K-51.1% ▼
Midazolam hydrochloride30190£4.3K+108.2% ▲
Timolol and travoprost30118£480-7.2% ▼
30352£971+120.0% ▲
30470£972-7.9% ▼
Enoxaparin29976£4.0K+41.5% ▲
Methenamine hippurate292,960£782-68.1% ▼
Isophane insulin29205£1.4K-72.5% ▼
29710£981+200.2% ▲
29219£381+75.7% ▲
Clomipramine hydrochloride282,086£329-33.6% ▼
Biphasic insulin aspart28215£1.3K-72.4% ▼
Powder single L-amino acid supplement (0913213)283,330£9.1K+80.8% ▲
2850£3.0K+221.5% ▲
Colestyramine273,170£1.1K-6.3% ▼
Tacrolimus272,100£3.2K+1.0% vs avg
Mupirocin27111£149+130.0% ▲
← Back to NEW ROAD 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.