PREMIER HEALTH TEAM — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: P92621 | LEIGH, WN7 2PE

Showing results 351-400 of 493

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ciprofloxacin23637£79-42.3% ▼
Timolol and bimatoprost23168£267-84.8% ▼
Typhoid2323£238-74.5% ▼
Other individually formulated bought in preparations23608£101-29.6% ▼
Trihexyphenidyl hydrochloride22644£24-22.4% ▼
Emollient bath and shower preparations2211.2K£168-65.0% ▼
22600£408-44.2% ▼
22478£2.2K-32.5% ▼
22220£149-49.0% ▼
Terbinafine hydrochloride211,414£709-66.0% ▼
Sodium chloride212,352£218-11.3% ▼
Calcium carbonate211,440£130-68.1% ▼
Atropine sulfate21610£2.0K+64.8% ▲
Fluticasone propionate (Nasal)2121£220-85.6% ▼
Phenytoin2024.2K£197+82.2% ▲
Trospium chloride201,360£302-60.8% ▼
Metronidazole20840£312-46.8% ▼
Ketoconazole20600£81+101.0% ▲
201,200£93-71.3% ▼
Tiotropium bromide/olodaterol1926£803-69.0% ▼
Duloxetine hydrochloride19532£115-62.9% ▼
Methocarbamol193,108£194-60.3% ▼
Clindamycin phosphate19750£121+15.5% ▲
198,400£133-79.2% ▼
Clobazam181,935£365-72.7% ▼
Dutasteride18696£42-64.9% ▼
Combined ethinylestradiol 20mcg181,656£213-65.5% ▼
Tamoxifen citrate18940£95-78.1% ▼
Celecoxib181,200£79-72.7% ▼
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate181,236£55-90.7% ▼
Acetazolamide181,764£67-16.9% ▼
Permethrin181,050£278-52.2% ▼
Glycopyrronium bromide18500£855-24.5% ▼
18390£1.3K+14.7% ▲
181,730£80+6.5% ▲
Lacosamide171,176£871-68.4% ▼
Risedronate sodium1788£25-86.0% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913011)17141.7K£1.5K-72.0% ▼
Specialist food replacer rolls/baguettes (0913271)1730.0K£599-29.6% ▼
17345£470+55.3% ▲
1742£260-52.4% ▼
1729.2K£1.3K-55.4% ▼
17780£4.0K+46.4% ▲
Sodium picosulfate163,940£333-55.9% ▼
Oxytetracycline161,624£715-38.1% ▼
Tube feed additive 1 kcal/ml higher protein liquid (0914051)16868£1.3K+17.7% ▲
162,000£122-81.2% ▼
16645£1.8K-52.6% ▼
16183£99-93.6% ▼
Midodrine hydrochloride151,260£355-69.2% ▼
← Back to PREMIER HEALTH TEAM
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.