STANFORD MEDICAL CENTRE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: G81038 | BRIGHTON, BN1 6AG

Showing results 351-400 of 588

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Urea4811.7K£575-28.2% ▼
48340£785+98.5% ▲
Glycerol471,455£256+34.0% ▲
Ferrous gluconate472,617£76-1.7% vs avg
Combined ethinylestradiol 20mcg463,309£639-11.9% ▼
461,580£3.0K+124.4% ▲
Dexamfetamine sulfate452,330£2.3K+25.2% ▲
456,076£341+20.5% ▲
Tiotropium bromide/olodaterol4467£2.1K-28.3% ▼
Oxcarbazepine443,912£2.3K+57.3% ▲
Metronidazole441,935£656+17.1% ▲
Midazolam hydrochloride44365£213+7.5% ▲
44870£2.8K+189.1% ▲
Tolterodine424,034£812-71.7% ▼
Verapamil hydrochloride413,752£289-54.8% ▼
Powder 2.3 - 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake lower volume (0913011)411,372£733+59.6% ▲
Permethrin412,340£613+8.8% ▲
411,070£4.7K-9.3% ▼
Nebivolol402,394£1.0K-62.3% ▼
Fluticasone furoate/vilanterol4064£1.6K-74.2% ▼
Diclofenac sodium402,200£1.6K+66.9% ▲
402,340£5.0K+0.3% vs avg
Telmisartan392,240£499-32.7% ▼
Timolol392,590£648-55.9% ▼
Fluticasone propionate/azelastine hydrochloride (Nasal)3952£732-65.6% ▼
RtS 3.3 - 4 kcal/ml energy with protein liquid (0913141)3895.5K£2.8K+43.1% ▲
3838£47-82.8% ▼
Aclidinium bromide3755£1.7K+39.4% ▲
Water for injection37519£168+9.4% ▲
Liquid OTC glucose for diabetic hypo treatment (0913541)3730.4K£468+61.5% ▲
Dulaglutide36144£2.6K-68.6% ▼
Solifenacin/tamsulosin36252£224+75.2% ▲
Terbinafine hydrochloride361,035£188-3.0% ▼
Nicorandil353,280£428-75.7% ▼
Umeclidinium bromide/vilanterol3546£1.4K-82.1% ▼
Clomipramine hydrochloride353,248£744-17.0% ▼
3548£3.4K+251.1% ▲
Fenofibrate342,520£275-64.9% ▼
Dexamethasone341,010£126+9.1% ▲
342,056£4.4K+0.7% vs avg
341,540£1.1K+2.8% ▲
341,270£4.1K+51.8% ▲
33205£501+126.0% ▲
Salmeterol3239£1.1K+33.0% ▲
Benzydamine hydrochloride3212.2K£199-58.6% ▼
Light liquid paraffin3212.6K£302-6.0% ▼
32685£313-4.1% ▼
Nitrazepam31868£45-40.3% ▼
Cinnarizine312,580£116-33.8% ▼
Testosterone esters3131£73+110.2% ▲
← Back to STANFORD 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.