ST. ANDREW'S SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 11

Practice Code: J82071 | EASTLEIGH, SO50 5PT

Showing results 501-550 of 633

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Azelaic acid18690£121-24.7% ▼
Mupirocin18315£111+93.9% ▲
1854£330+1.5% vs avg
182,800£405+54.2% ▲
Co-amilofruse (Amiloride hydrochloride/frusemide)17784£97-51.1% ▼
Nitrazepam17357£20-67.3% ▼
Mebendazole17224£19+48.5% ▲
Glucagon1728£507+11.8% ▲
Capsaicin17906£433+115.3% ▲
Eflornithine monohydrate chloride171,020£919+142.0% ▲
Lidocaine17300£285+47.9% ▲
17149£319-47.8% ▼
Phosphates (Rectal)16230£804+30.9% ▲
Glyceryl trinitrate16510£635+20.4% ▲
Bezafibrate16912£222-70.3% ▼
Clomipramine hydrochloride162,688£669-62.0% ▼
Testosterone enantate1669£2.2K+124.0% ▲
RtS 2.4 kcal/ml m/sk lower volume, higher protein (0913011)16139.3K£2.8K-77.1% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake with fibre (0913021)16220.0K£5.5K+15.9% ▲
Other sunscreening preparations164,350£216+104.2% ▲
16346£557+14.1% ▲
Budesonide15735£1.8K-4.3% ▼
Zinc oxide15568£58-27.5% ▼
Pivmecillinam hydrochloride15204£110-71.4% ▼
Sodium chloride154,300£811-36.6% ▼
Magnesium glycerophosphate152,186£946+9.2% ▲
Liquid OTC glucose for diabetic hypo treatment (0913541)1531.7K£479-34.5% ▼
Indometacin151,148£78-4.7% ▼
Piroxicam151,428£37-73.9% ▼
15253£948-2.1% ▼
15450£6.1K+43.5% ▲
15860£3.9K+278.4% ▲
15125£362+60.4% ▲
15900£497+45.2% ▲
1515£237+69.6% ▲
Propantheline bromide141,904£1.8K+7.9% ▲
Telmisartan14700£97-75.9% ▼
Chlorpromazine hydrochloride142,128£1.8K-64.4% ▼
Valproic acid14420£114-83.9% ▼
Rasagiline mesilate14736£460-62.3% ▼
Nicotine14333£484-75.2% ▼
Pioglitazone hydrochloride14784£27-84.2% ▼
Tibolone14644£57-54.3% ▼
Dutasteride14802£49-72.7% ▼
Indoramin141,116£903-7.9% ▼
Exemestane14600£89-56.9% ▼
Bicalutamide14476£29-56.7% ▼
Other phosphate supplement preparations14280£53+129.4% ▲
Prednisolone sodium phosphate14820£529+9.8% ▲
Other camouflage preparations14483£640+46.6% ▲
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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.