THE JOHN HAMPDEN SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 5

Practice Code: K82035 | GREAT MISSENDEN, HP16 9EU

Showing results 201-250 of 388

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Metoclopramide hydrochloride311,568£49-62.6% ▼
Semaglutide31958£4.5K-87.1% ▼
Risedronate sodium31184£48-74.4% ▼
Calcium carbonate312,620£223-52.9% ▼
Fluticasone propionate (Nasal)3133£346-78.7% ▼
311,640£1.1K-23.6% ▼
Lercanidipine hydrochloride301,316£104-95.1% ▼
Specialist food replacer bread (0913271)3082.5K£751-30.9% ▼
Clotrimazole30860£53-69.0% ▼
Glyceryl trinitrate2929£61-87.7% ▼
Lithium carbonate292,880£406-77.1% ▼
Azathioprine293,488£72-73.2% ▼
Other multivitamin preparations29786£86-83.2% ▼
Sodium cromoglicate29392£92-68.8% ▼
Esomeprazole281,484£135-93.1% ▼
Hydroxychloroquine sulfate281,476£66-85.5% ▼
Docusate sodium273,330£213-92.7% ▼
Topiramate275,008£283-84.8% ▼
Letrozole271,456£138-85.5% ▼
Prucalopride261,092£520-33.2% ▼
Carbimazole262,104£110-77.0% ▼
Denosumab2626£4.8K-4.5% ▼
Diphtheria2626£188-61.0% ▼
261,400£468-36.5% ▼
Terbutaline sulphate2525£197-53.9% ▼
Escitalopram251,120£76-91.2% ▼
Erythromycin252,220£733-27.8% ▼
Quinine sulfate25896£183-91.4% ▼
Combined ethinylestradiol 20mcg251,617£175-52.1% ▼
Hepatitis A2525£488-67.1% ▼
253,850£616-36.4% ▼
Eplerenone241,064£125-90.9% ▼
Carvedilol241,400£45-78.8% ▼
Tranexamic acid241,770£114-71.7% ▼
Methenamine hippurate242,040£523-73.6% ▼
Linagliptin241,120£1.3K-94.1% ▼
Fludrocortisone acetate241,470£203-77.2% ▼
Testosterone242,784£1.3K-68.5% ▼
Thiamine hydrochloride241,100£29-95.4% ▼
24865£2.8K+135.6% ▲
Desmopressin acetate231,170£692-55.9% ▼
Norethisterone231,932£46+64.5% ▲
Azelaic acid23900£177-3.8% ▼
233,700£527-40.9% ▼
Sodium picosulfate225,200£457-39.4% ▼
Verapamil hydrochloride222,520£136-75.8% ▼
Lorazepam22570£126-84.6% ▼
Rivastigmine221,278£390-68.0% ▼
Brimonidine tartrate22130£60-44.9% ▼
Metronidazole22750£303-41.5% ▼
← Back to THE JOHN HAMPDEN 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.