NEWTON MEDICAL CENTRE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 7

Practice Code: E87681 | LONDON, W2 5LT

Showing results 301-350 of 607

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ketone blood testing reagents58830£917-14.3% ▼
Tolterodine584,452£642-61.0% ▼
Topiramate573,901£633-67.9% ▼
Valaciclovir574,023£6.0K+305.6% ▲
Terbinafine hydrochloride571,185£225+53.6% ▲
57750£2.2K+431.5% ▲
Linagliptin/metformin561,400£796+66.3% ▲
Dulaglutide56428£7.8K-51.1% ▼
Vitamins caps563,416£59+1.9% vs avg
Azelastine hydrochloride56552£420+371.1% ▲
Latanoprost and timolol551,493£738-28.0% ▼
Doxycycline monohydrate54574£330+397.3% ▲
Permethrin544,732£1.4K+43.3% ▲
54550£66+43.6% ▲
Nebivolol533,932£1.1K-50.0% ▼
Norethisterone531,982£327+9.3% ▲
Mefenamic acid532,094£382+17.3% ▲
Fluticasone/umeclidinium/vilanterol52127£5.4K-77.8% ▼
Codeine phosphate529,420£322+262.3% ▲
Trimethoprim521,958£106-74.6% ▼
Other compound vitamin/mineral formulation preparations52728£120+62.2% ▲
Diclofenac sodium521,602£320+2.4% ▲
Adapalene and benzoyl peroxide523,465£1.5K-2.6% ▼
Sodium picosulfate5118.7K£1.2K+40.5% ▲
Lymecycline513,728£429-57.6% ▼
Empagliflozin/metformin517,840£4.9K-2.0% ▼
Adapalene512,520£875+133.0% ▲
Lithium carbonate504,896£740-60.6% ▼
Tapentadol501,960£3.1K+21.5% ▲
Biphasic insulin lispro50595£3.7K+16.5% ▲
Trospium chloride50722£468-2.1% ▼
Dantrolene sodium501,540£252+177.2% ▲
502,338£326-30.7% ▼
502,760£1.8K+224.6% ▲
Azelaic acid492,310£420+105.0% ▲
Valsartan482,772£676-18.5% ▼
Combined ethinylestradiol 20mcg484,449£751-8.1% ▼
Tamoxifen citrate482,983£441-41.7% ▼
48562£1.7K+72.5% ▲
Finerenone47987£1.2K+331.9% ▲
4757£2.5K-84.9% ▼
Magnesium glycerophosphate47674£553+242.1% ▲
Glycopyrronium bromide47703£1.2K+97.2% ▲
471,770£2.3K+188.0% ▲
Desmopressin acetate464,140£3.0K-11.8% ▼
464,380£851+583.1% ▲
453,780£587+64.8% ▲
452,630£11.2K-0.5% vs avg
Sulpiride444,260£725+64.3% ▲
Ciprofloxacin44918£77+10.3% ▲
← Back to NEWTON MEDICAL CENTRE
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.