QUEENS ROAD SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications

Practice Code: A83049 | CONSETT, DH8 0BW

Over the last 12 months, QUEENS ROAD SURGERY prescribed 437,125 items across 720 different medications at a total cost of £2,927,480 to the NHS. Below is the complete list of all medications prescribed, sorted by volume.

MedicationItems (12m) ↑QuantityCostvs National
Salmeterol1010£278-58.4% ▼
Levomepromazine maleate10364£97+8.9% ▲
Trimipramine maleate101,400£4.2K-37.2% ▼
Atogepant10280£1.8K+82.8% ▲
Dienogest10336£234+38.1% ▲
Vitamin B compound10504£15-92.8% ▼
Powder 10g protein equivalent (0913226)10540£4.5K-13.4% ▼
Tablets/capsules micronutrient supplement (0913282)10600£431-4.5% ▼
Aceclofenac10600£82+3.4% ▲
Hyetellose10660£293+24.2% ▲
Emulsifying wax105,000£36-17.9% ▼
Brimonidine tart (Rosacea)10300£320+93.7% ▲
Benzalkonium chloride102,750£61-12.8% ▼
10147£189-39.9% ▼
10100£188+154.3% ▲
10930£3.6K-30.1% ▼
10300£650-29.3% ▼
10250£1.1K+53.9% ▲
10250£1.5K-13.1% ▼
10370£2.1K-19.9% ▼
10300£1.9K-1.6% vs avg
Simple114,200£39-4.2% ▼
Hyoscine11164£1.1K+58.5% ▲
Almotriptan1166£143-11.3% ▼
Biphasic insulin lispro11180£1.1K-74.4% ▼
Acarbose11930£256-5.8% ▼
Denosumab1111£2.0K-59.6% ▼
Cyproterone acetate11308£346+0.2% vs avg
Other phosphate supplement preparations11620£117+80.3% ▲
Powder 5g protein equivalent (0913226)111,080£4.4K+14.4% ▲
Specialist food replacer pizza bases (0913261)118,700£222+99.4% ▲
11465£413+152.1% ▲
11525£586+138.9% ▲
1117£877+146.6% ▲
11600£2.1K-50.9% ▼
11440£633-21.5% ▼
11365£892+17.1% ▲
11350£2.2K+21.0% ▲
Eprosartan12336£163-40.6% ▼
Imipramine hydrochloride121,092£36-52.9% ▼
Moclobemide12676£201-7.4% ▼
Midazolam hydrochloride1245£1.0K-16.7% ▼
Liothyronine sodium12336£805-43.7% ▼
Metronidazole12480£49+81.5% ▲
Combined ethinylestradiol 35mcg121,785£118-3.7% ▼
Clindamycin/tretinoin12360£136+2.2% ▲
Other sunscreening preparations121,500£114+53.1% ▲
12135£175-34.5% ▼
12150£490-60.9% ▼
121,350£354-41.1% ▼
← Back to QUEENS 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.