THE LEA SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 11
Practice Code: F84105 | LONDON, E9 6AG
Showing results 501-533 of 533
| Medication | Items (12m) ↓ | Quantity | Cost | vs National |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clonidine hydrochloride | 11 | 2,184 | £216 | -79.4% ▼ |
| Oxytetracycline | 11 | 2,016 | £735 | -57.4% ▼ |
| Fosfomycin trometamol | 11 | 14 | £65 | -61.3% ▼ |
| Pioglitazone hydrochloride | 11 | 504 | £22 | -87.6% ▼ |
| Specialist food replacer breakfast cereal (0913261) | 11 | 4,125 | £116 | +17.4% ▲ |
| Tizanidine hydrochloride | 11 | 624 | £56 | -58.5% ▼ |
| Budesonide | 11 | 14 | £142 | -29.3% ▼ |
| Clindamycin phosphate | 11 | 390 | £105 | -33.1% ▼ |
| 11 | 310 | £852 | -64.2% ▼ | |
| 11 | 970 | £297 | -59.7% ▼ | |
| 11 | 900 | £339 | -57.3% ▼ | |
| Acenocoumarol | 10 | 936 | £42 | +1.1% vs avg |
| Phenobarbital | 10 | 588 | £126 | -67.5% ▼ |
| Nicotine | 10 | 253 | £271 | -82.3% ▼ |
| Pivmecillinam hydrochloride | 10 | 125 | £66 | -81.0% ▼ |
| Methenamine hippurate | 10 | 712 | £155 | -89.0% ▼ |
| Combined ethinylestradiol 35mcg | 10 | 1,260 | £88 | -19.7% ▼ |
| Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake higher volume (0913011) | 10 | 91.0K | £553 | -50.6% ▼ |
| Specialist food replacer milk (0913261) | 10 | 35.1K | £282 | +0.7% vs avg |
| Specialist food replacer bread (0913271) | 10 | 24.0K | £227 | -77.0% ▼ |
| Tube feed additive 0.5 kcal/ml high fibre liquid (0914052) | 10 | 17.7K | £618 | +3.7% ▲ |
| Timolol and travoprost | 10 | 50 | £232 | -69.1% ▼ |
| Ketorolac trometamol | 10 | 60 | £49 | +7.8% ▲ |
| Sodium chloride | 10 | 630 | £459 | -66.4% ▼ |
| Cetomacrogol | 10 | 5,000 | £35 | -65.4% ▼ |
| Benzalkonium chloride | 10 | 3,500 | £77 | -12.8% ▼ |
| Malathion | 10 | 1,950 | £177 | +56.6% ▲ |
| Lidocaine | 10 | 745 | £127 | -13.0% ▼ |
| 10 | 300 | £171 | +52.1% ▲ | |
| 10 | 1,600 | £67 | -92.4% ▼ | |
| 10 | 38 | £443 | -1.5% vs avg | |
| 10 | 300 | £48 | -62.8% ▼ | |
| 10 | 300 | £1.1K | -24.5% ▼ |
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.