THE CUCKOO LANE PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 6

Practice Code: E85116 | LONDON, W7 1DR

Showing results 251-300 of 430

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Nicotine402,085£900-29.2% ▼
Colchicine401,752£34-48.7% ▼
40782£386-60.8% ▼
Losartan potassium with diuretic391,792£270+52.1% ▲
Nicorandil391,220£142-72.9% ▼
Neomycin sulfate39585£74-34.2% ▼
Glyceryl trinitrate38241£127-83.9% ▼
BeclometDiprop/Formoterol/Glycopyrronium (Corticosteroids)3860£2.7K-77.3% ▼
Zolmitriptan38318£974-41.5% ▼
Olopatadine38265£264-13.4% ▼
3838£217-25.9% ▼
Mebeverine hydrochloride373,976£185-88.1% ▼
Insulin Lispro37297£3.0K-51.6% ▼
37450£1.4K+20.4% ▲
37980£741+12.7% ▲
375,085£239-9.6% ▼
Other multivitamin preparations362,756£947-79.2% ▼
36882£96-27.9% ▼
361,140£4.1K-20.4% ▼
Tamoxifen citrate351,556£212-57.5% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake (0913011)35132.2K£851-75.4% ▼
Valsartan341,764£410-42.3% ▼
Specialist food replacer bread (0913271)3490.8K£845-21.7% ▼
Powder extensively hydrolysed formula (0913101)33125.6K£3.6K-54.2% ▼
Pancreatin3212.5K£2.2K-71.2% ▼
Quinine sulfate321,400£170-88.9% ▼
Insulin detemir32280£2.4K-59.1% ▼
Ibuprofen323,070£77-73.7% ▼
Mefenamic acid311,068£190-31.4% ▼
Other toiletry preparations314,582£161-27.4% ▼
314,270£144-63.6% ▼
Tranexamic acid301,372£105-64.6% ▼
Rizatriptan30264£781-49.5% ▼
Pimecrolimus301,450£883+77.2% ▲
303,400£116-89.2% ▼
Theophylline291,960£991-65.3% ▼
Tirzepatide2929£2.8K-85.1% ▼
Cyanocobalamin29762£75-91.8% ▼
Brinzolamide29335£243-77.7% ▼
291,149£655-1.3% vs avg
29910£2.2K+41.5% ▲
Nitrazepam28196£13-46.1% ▼
Lurasidone281,736£4.7K+12.2% ▲
Valsartan/amlodipine271,792£1.4K+146.1% ▲
Zuclopenthixol hydrochloride272,700£207-14.4% ▼
Powder preterm infant formula (0913111)2748.0K£775+69.5% ▲
Adapalene and benzoyl peroxide271,335£583-49.4% ▼
Miconazole nitrate271,550£154-61.8% ▼
Verapamil hydrochloride263,712£135-71.3% ▼
Pyridoxine hydrochloride26136£53+21.0% ▲
← Back to THE CUCKOO LANE PRACTICE
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.