OLD MILL SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 4

Practice Code: M84051 | NUNEATON, CV11 5PQ

Showing results 151-200 of 691

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Estriol3655,312£6.3K+71.5% ▲
361361£16.0K+16.2% ▲
Olanzapine3598,970£989-3.1% ▼
Pravastatin sodium35810.1K£470+10.2% ▲
3553,327£1.2K+42.3% ▲
Glyceryl trinitrate351469£899+48.4% ▲
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake (0913011)3471.5M£10.1K+144.2% ▲
Meloxicam3419,951£319+415.6% ▲
Fluticasone furoate340361£2.3K+75.5% ▲
Estradiol with progestogen33219.7K£15.9K-2.6% ▼
Timolol and bimatoprost3322,562£4.1K+118.8% ▲
Clobetasone butyrate32719.4K£3.4K+60.2% ▲
Risperidone32116.2K£4.5K+26.9% ▲
Clotrimazole3212,687£3.0K+190.9% ▲
Topiramate32019.8K£1.2K+80.1% ▲
Brinzolamide3201,900£1.5K+146.3% ▲
Calcipotriol31828.1K£15.6K+86.8% ▲
Memantine hydrochloride3179,244£1.2K-4.0% ▼
315335£1.9K+33.4% ▲
Fentanyl3143,020£12.0K+206.5% ▲
3102,815£806+48.3% ▲
Orlistat30523.5K£5.7K+270.0% ▲
Tirzepatide299345£33.2K+54.0% ▲
Zolmitriptan2923,600£12.2K+349.7% ▲
Digoxin2898,134£595-23.6% ▼
Baclofen28964.7K£1.4K+44.3% ▲
Donepezil hydrochloride2878,377£411-7.0% ▼
Carmellose sodium28414.7K£2.0K+338.3% ▲
Esomeprazole2809,464£1.3K-30.8% ▼
Sodium cromoglicate2693,669£937+189.6% ▲
Trimethoprim2677,910£348+30.7% ▲
Umeclidinium bromide/vilanterol266266£8.2K+36.4% ▲
Nifedipine26214.1K£5.1K+39.8% ▲
Ketoprofen26229.7K£1.3K+630.2% ▲
Vitamin B compound26115.5K£658+87.4% ▲
Letrozole2537,067£823+35.5% ▲
Nebivolol2527,742£1.7K+137.7% ▲
Progesterone24926.2K£5.2K-40.5% ▼
Dorzolamide and timolol2495,565£3.9K+74.0% ▲
24734.8K£1.4K-10.7% ▼
Vortioxetine2447,632£7.2K+251.5% ▲
Zolpidem tartrate2417,277£315+167.5% ▲
Chloramphenicol2411,854£1.1K+110.5% ▲
Hypromellose2372,430£389+78.9% ▲
23323.1K£1.4K+7.7% ▲
Alfacalcidol23010.1K£1.7K+86.0% ▲
Eplerenone2296,111£745-13.6% ▼
Insulin degludec2291,336£15.6K+108.4% ▲
22753.0K£7.7K+731.4% ▲
Pantoprazole2258,036£364-18.1% ▼
← Back to OLD MILL 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.