ST CATHERINE'S SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: N85020 | BIRKENHEAD, CH42 0LQ

Showing results 351-400 of 688

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Leuprorelin acetate7777£11.1K+66.2% ▲
Lacosamide7612.2K£3.3K+41.4% ▲
Cocois769,300£1.4K+453.5% ▲
Terbutaline sulphate7497£766+36.4% ▲
Adrenaline74222£9.4K+17.4% ▲
741,100£678+71.7% ▲
Lurasidone731,198£3.3K+192.6% ▲
Glycerol711,272£199+102.4% ▲
Codeine phosphate7034.7K£1.1K+387.7% ▲
Primidone705,166£7.7K+96.7% ▲
Ciprofloxacin68976£73+70.5% ▲
Biphasic insulin lispro68415£2.5K+58.4% ▲
Ibandronic acid6880£87+87.1% ▲
Midazolam hydrochloride68738£465+66.2% ▲
Prednisolone acetate67695£242+267.6% ▲
Lofepramine hydrochloride664,340£1.8K+120.6% ▲
Powder amino acid formula (0913107)66243.2K£15.4K+99.9% ▲
656,260£1.2K+236.3% ▲
Umeclidinium bromide6469£1.8K+3.8% ▲
641,010£3.7K+202.7% ▲
Sodium feredetate6322.3K£637+120.0% ▲
Terbinafine hydrochloride632,850£521+69.8% ▲
Norethisterone622,380£361+27.8% ▲
Cinnarizine617,458£336+30.4% ▲
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913011)61607.4K£6.4K+0.3% vs avg
Specialist food replacer bread (0913271)61145.0K£1.4K+40.5% ▲
Chlorhexidine gluconate6129.0K£626+106.6% ▲
Ferrous gluconate602,732£76+25.5% ▲
RtS 2-2.4 kcal/ml m/sk higher protein,higher energy(0913011)601.2M£16.8K+37.1% ▲
Timolol601,538£438-32.2% ▼
604,721£387-78.3% ▼
60164£11.9K+68.0% ▲
Prucalopride592,128£984+51.5% ▲
Vitamin B compound594,044£164-57.6% ▼
Levonorgestrel58805£26+613.4% ▲
Sodium fluoride583,774£433+74.8% ▲
Glycopyrronium bromide58569£929+143.4% ▲
5834.0K£2.4K+52.1% ▲
5835.9K£428-36.4% ▼
Tapentadol573,416£2.0K+38.5% ▲
Anastrozole572,828£579-37.4% ▼
574,900£12.6K+68.8% ▲
Valsartan562,520£586-4.9% ▼
Potassium chloride563,340£354+199.6% ▲
561,461£519+13.3% ▲
564,100£382-30.4% ▼
Menthol5522.9K£845+95.3% ▲
Adapalene552,880£1,000+151.3% ▲
55393£807+304.9% ▲
Promazine hydrochloride541,119£638+2.3% ▲
← Back to ST CATHERINE'S 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.