RUSHDEN MEDICAL CENTRE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: K83024 | RUSHDEN, NN10 9TR

Showing results 351-400 of 615

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Domperidone433,462£162+20.6% ▲
Indometacin432,380£152+173.3% ▲
Nebivolol421,176£196-60.4% ▼
Fentanyl42405£2.3K-59.0% ▼
Mefenamic acid421,823£345-7.0% ▼
Urea4217.5K£526-37.1% ▼
42420£51+11.7% ▲
Goserelin acetate4141£5.3K-6.9% ▼
4180£377+0.7% vs avg
Co-trimoxazole(Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole)401,736£97-0.4% vs avg
Risedronate sodium40160£42-67.0% ▼
Norethisterone402,828£70+186.0% ▲
Bicalutamide401,253£63+23.6% ▲
Carmellose sodium401,320£146-38.3% ▼
Phosphates (Rectal)39138£5.2K+219.1% ▲
Prasugrel391,092£172+24.1% ▲
Rizatriptan39288£737-34.4% ▼
Oxcarbazepine393,518£622+39.5% ▲
Memantine hydrochloride391,120£170-88.2% ▼
Ins degludec/liraglutide3997£3.1K+142.6% ▲
3913.4K£253-85.2% ▼
Clonidine hydrochloride381,400£111+108.0% ▲
Valproic acid383,000£714-56.3% ▼
Lidocaine hydrochloride38686£709-78.0% ▼
Rivastigmine371,240£842-46.2% ▼
Biphasic insulin aspart37300£1.8K-63.6% ▼
Dorzolamide37250£235-55.5% ▼
Metronidazole371,670£443-1.5% vs avg
Miconazole nitrate371,240£179-47.7% ▼
37242£465+124.2% ▲
37228£622+53.0% ▲
Glucose364,590£407-30.8% ▼
Crotamiton363,150£210+116.5% ▲
Irbesartan35980£33-85.6% ▼
Dexamethasone351,400£124+12.3% ▲
Alprostadil35202£2.4K+104.7% ▲
Magnesium glycerophosphate355,274£1.7K+154.7% ▲
Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake higher volume (0913011)35219.3K£1.3K+73.0% ▲
353,750£369-27.4% ▼
Labetalol hydrochloride341,932£243+49.7% ▲
Erythromycin ethylsuccinate343,700£350+45.6% ▲
Tibolone341,428£134+11.1% ▲
34827£2.0K+104.3% ▲
341,740£6.9K+31.5% ▲
Bempedoic acid33924£1.7K+0.7% vs avg
Liquid OTC glucose for diabetic hypo treatment (0913541)3317.8K£278+44.0% ▲
Neomycin sulfate33495£63-44.3% ▼
32487£2.1K+15.0% ▲
Testosterone undecanoate3131£2.7K+22.1% ▲
Mycophenolate mofetil313,312£670-23.4% ▼
← Back to RUSHDEN 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.