STRAYSIDE HEALTH — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 7

Practice Code: B82016 | HARROGATE, HG1 5AR

Showing results 301-350 of 569

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Mupirocin53855£309+470.9% ▲
Azelaic acid521,590£289+117.5% ▲
521,680£859+99.6% ▲
Terbinafine hydrochloride511,500£268+37.5% ▲
Trospium chloride502,543£1.8K-2.1% ▼
Calcium carbonate504,118£361-24.0% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913011)50105.3K£984-17.8% ▼
Mefenamic acid501,975£401+10.7% ▲
Benzoyl peroxide and clindamycin phosphate501,740£748-25.4% ▼
Fluorouracil (Sunscreen)491,945£1.5K+34.5% ▲
492,400£3.9K+200.2% ▲
Prasterone482,072£1.1K+627.3% ▲
Sodium feredetate4824.0K£680+67.6% ▲
48600£1.5K+308.2% ▲
4810.9K£435-52.7% ▼
Perindopril erbumine473,462£236-91.1% ▼
Metoclopramide hydrochloride472,975£116-43.3% ▼
Lacosamide475,288£687-12.5% ▼
Adrenaline46102£5.9K-27.0% ▼
Clonazepam463,165£404-70.5% ▼
Enoxaparin451,441£8.1K+119.5% ▲
Orlistat454,704£1.1K-45.4% ▼
Miconazole nitrate451,810£241-36.4% ▼
45931£2.9K+38.1% ▲
45258£626+85.7% ▲
454,045£8.3K+155.2% ▲
Primidone445,214£6.4K+23.6% ▲
Benzydamine hydrochloride449,270£180-43.1% ▼
Ursodeoxycholic acid4311.0K£2.3K-35.0% ▼
Liquid OTC glucose for diabetic hypo treatment (0913541)4320.4K£317+87.6% ▲
Febuxostat432,016£186+15.1% ▲
Metronidazole431,465£528+14.4% ▲
Biphasic insulin lispro42321£2.0K-2.2% ▼
42555£1.4K+51.8% ▲
Peppermint oil415,032£778-48.5% ▼
Haloperidol413,030£9.2K-13.9% ▼
Verapamil hydrochloride402,912£560-55.9% ▼
4040£246-22.0% ▼
Sotalol hydrochloride393,248£103-44.5% ▼
Ibandronic acid391,858£1.7K+7.3% ▲
Powder amino acid formula (0913107)3997.2K£6.2K+18.1% ▲
Dexamethasone39969£375-34.7% ▼
392,019£9.3K-2.2% ▼
Co-dydramol (Dihydrocodeine/paracetamol)387,492£342-78.9% ▼
Pizotifen malate383,672£164-53.9% ▼
Galantamine381,764£2.4K+0.4% vs avg
Ivermectin381,815£1.1K+78.7% ▲
3878£691+219.2% ▲
3821.6K£213-58.3% ▼
Sulfasalazine376,048£1.1K-71.6% ▼
← Back to STRAYSIDE HEALTH
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.