THE BRIDGE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: M81092 | REDDITCH, B97 4LA

Showing results 351-400 of 496

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Propylthiouracil231,036£196+83.0% ▲
Ivermectin231,065£618+8.2% ▲
Amorolfine hydrochloride23151£243-0.4% vs avg
Hyoscine hydrobromide22688£111-35.6% ▼
Co-trimoxazole(Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole)22802£56-45.2% ▼
Mycophenolate mofetil222,608£400-45.7% ▼
Sevelamer224,470£716+0.4% vs avg
Sodium chloride22580£365-26.0% ▼
22515£207-55.5% ▼
2227£190+254.8% ▲
22780£1.7K+55.5% ▲
Doxycycline monohydrate21600£336+93.4% ▲
Testosterone undecanoate2121£1.8K-17.3% ▼
Bicalutamide21588£29-35.1% ▼
Potassium chloride21420£42+12.3% ▲
Celecoxib211,490£74-68.2% ▼
Adapalene and benzoyl peroxide21945£412-60.7% ▼
212,970£107-75.3% ▼
Rabeprazole sodium20756£79-61.2% ▼
Zinc oxide20509£59-3.3% ▼
Aclidinium bromide/formoterol2028£865-43.1% ▼
Daridorexant20840£1.1K+53.0% ▲
Pramipexole20780£35-79.6% ▼
Vitamin B compound20844£25-85.6% ▼
Powder thickener - gum based (0913161)208,421£442-73.4% ▼
Phenobarbital191,064£271-38.2% ▼
Rivastigmine19726£1.3K-72.4% ▼
Erythromycin191,448£549-45.2% ▼
Levonorgestrel1919£1.5K-49.7% ▼
Calcium carbonate191,486£126-71.1% ▼
Powder 1.6 kcal/ml milkshake (0913011)19263£160-74.5% ▼
Powder 2.3 - 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake lower volume (0913011)19189£99-26.0% ▼
Tube feed 1.5 kcal/ml with fibre (0914011)19394.5K£7.3K+64.4% ▲
Hydrocortisone acetate19570£109-71.2% ▼
1919£1.6K-46.8% ▼
Amisulpride181,080£1.2K-74.4% ▼
182,400£4.0K-15.0% ▼
18200£628-11.6% ▼
184,350£747-54.2% ▼
18690£1.7K+91.6% ▲
Glycerol17390£66-51.5% ▼
Ranolazine171,852£316-90.0% ▼
Cyclizine lactate17200£180+13.3% ▲
Methenamine hippurate171,456£456-81.3% ▼
Pioglitazone hydrochloride17672£87-80.8% ▼
Glucose171,745£109-67.3% ▼
Trospium chloride17664£339-66.7% ▼
Cyanocobalamin17670£157-95.2% ▼
Sodium chloride177,680£2.3K-28.2% ▼
Pyridoxine hydrochloride17588£232-20.9% ▼
← Back to THE BRIDGE 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.