PETERSFIELD MEDICAL PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: D81056 | CAMBRIDGE, CB1 2AB

Showing results 351-400 of 431

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ipratropium bromide16193£125-44.3% ▼
Codeine phosphate164,400£107+11.5% ▲
Primidone161,506£2.2K-55.0% ▼
Rotigotine161,428£4.5K-40.7% ▼
Insulin degludec1686£1.1K-85.4% ▼
Ketone blood testing reagents16170£163-76.4% ▼
Brinzolamide1680£57-87.7% ▼
1628£178-55.2% ▼
16420£297-51.6% ▼
16910£176-28.5% ▼
Co-tenidone (Atenolol/chlortalidone)15406£78-28.1% ▼
Liothyronine sodium15840£3.2K-29.7% ▼
Medroxyprogesterone acetate15960£226-60.8% ▼
Levonorgestrel1515£1.2K-60.3% ▼
Ferrous gluconate151,000£29-68.6% ▼
Tube feed additive 0.5 kcal/ml high fibre liquid (0914052)1513.3K£466+55.6% ▲
Urea154,700£333-77.6% ▼
Erythromycin15640£274+10.5% ▲
1515£79-70.8% ▼
151,005£79-44.2% ▼
Liquid paraffin144,200£74+298.4% ▲
Chlortalidone14212£452+41.9% ▲
Enalapril maleate with diuretic14588£475+45.7% ▲
Valsartan with diuretic14756£442+5.7% ▲
Dalteparin sodium14523£2.9K-15.3% ▼
Buspirone hydrochloride14862£123-72.2% ▼
Phenytoin sodium141,176£262-82.7% ▼
Tube feed 1.5 kcal/ml higher protein (0914011)14192.5K£3.3K+94.0% ▲
Timolol and bimatoprost1442£187-90.8% ▼
Carmellose sodium14420£56-78.4% ▼
Clindamycin/tretinoin14540£204+19.3% ▲
14450£1.4K+49.9% ▲
Prucalopride131,204£963-66.6% ▼
Hydrochlorothiazide13386£188+183.9% ▲
Doxepin131,456£4.9K+0.0% vs avg
Clobazam131,320£465-80.3% ▼
Bupropion hydrochloride13752£497+20.3% ▲
Urine testing reagents13650£35+16.3% ▲
RtS 1.4 - 2 kcal/g dessert style (milk based) (0913011)1320.5K£396-65.9% ▼
Tube feed 1 kcal/ml peptide based (0914041)13286.0K£5.4K+46.3% ▲
Dexamethasone13160£58-78.2% ▼
Pimecrolimus13420£260-23.2% ▼
Fluorouracil (Sunscreen)13520£406-64.3% ▼
131,300£12-48.3% ▼
13750£1.6K-61.5% ▼
1338£185-58.1% ▼
1334£294-53.3% ▼
13780£276+85.2% ▲
13390£357-67.9% ▼
131,560£220-1.5% vs avg
← Back to PETERSFIELD MEDICAL 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.