THE EVERGLADE MEDICAL PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 9

Practice Code: E83011 | LONDON, NW9 5XT

Showing results 401-450 of 540

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Olmesartan medoxomil22700£36-68.1% ▼
Valsartan221,148£286-62.6% ▼
Colestyramine221,550£352-23.6% ▼
Tamoxifen citrate22968£80-73.3% ▼
Dexamethasone sodium metasulphobenzoate22192£171+196.0% ▲
Crotamiton222,610£156+32.3% ▲
222,200£328-44.0% ▼
Aclidinium bromide2127£834-20.9% ▼
Ondansetron hydrochloride21950£351-56.7% ▼
Ropinirole hydrochloride21919£525-80.2% ▼
Celecoxib21862£55-68.2% ▼
Azelastine hydrochloride21168£128+76.7% ▲
Aciclovir21110£106+70.3% ▲
Minoxidil201,710£386+79.4% ▲
Captopril20560£166+38.2% ▲
Valproic acid201,440£519-77.0% ▼
203,005£30-20.5% ▼
Sotalol hydrochloride192,128£78-73.0% ▼
Bempedoic acid/Ezetimibe19672£1.3K-68.9% ▼
Mebendazole19261£22+66.0% ▲
Etonogestrel1919£1.6K-34.3% ▼
Specialist food replacer bread (0913271)1938.4K£379-56.2% ▼
Tars193,250£216+126.7% ▲
19230£443-51.7% ▼
19218£459-72.3% ▼
191,030£203-30.4% ▼
Perampanel18560£2.7K-16.9% ▼
Tetrabenazine18840£872+13.5% ▲
Metformin hydrochloride/sitagliptin181,120£187-51.9% ▼
Fesoterodine fumarate18644£54-54.4% ▼
Triptorelin1818£3.7K-14.7% ▼
Potassium chloride181,500£149-3.7% ▼
Liquid OTC glucose for diabetic hypo treatment (0913541)1812.7K£195-21.5% ▼
Diethylamine salicylate181,450£45-33.3% ▼
Cyclopentolate hydrochloride18145£235+214.7% ▲
182,340£248-62.7% ▼
18400£2.0K-19.3% ▼
Modafinil171,410£336-18.5% ▼
Pivmecillinam hydrochloride17370£194-67.6% ▼
Sodium zirconium cyclosilicate17510£4.2K+93.5% ▲
Water for injection17320£2.4K-49.7% ▼
Ketorolac trometamol17165£143+83.2% ▲
Other individually formulated bought in preparations17496£156-48.0% ▼
171,737£151-49.1% ▼
174,720£597-60.6% ▼
17600£2.0K-62.4% ▼
Alprostadil1651£519-6.4% ▼
Powder extensively hydrolysed formula (0913132)1666.8K£2.2K+184.7% ▲
Other barrier preparations16930£99+170.4% ▲
16232£52-59.4% ▼
← Back to THE EVERGLADE MEDICAL 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.