THE LIGHTHOUSE GROUP PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: J82060 | SOUTHSEA, PO5 1AT

Showing results 351-400 of 627

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Dexamethasone50704£406-16.3% ▼
Prasugrel492,128£407+55.9% ▲
Bicalutamide491,176£83+51.5% ▲
Benzydamine hydrochloride4916.2K£283-36.6% ▼
Ondansetron hydrochloride481,516£485-1.1% vs avg
Galantamine481,099£954+26.8% ▲
Heparinoid486,000£328+83.0% ▲
481,490£3.1K+134.1% ▲
Perampanel47791£3.8K+116.9% ▲
47177£1.1K+269.4% ▲
Adrenaline46117£7.0K-27.0% ▼
Biphasic insulin aspart46590£3.5K-54.7% ▼
Testosterone468,500£3.4K-39.7% ▼
Tacrolimus462,070£1.6K-14.7% ▼
Adapalene and benzoyl peroxide462,265£986-13.9% ▼
462,890£213-34.1% ▼
466,370£970+17.0% ▲
452,290£113-17.1% ▼
451,996£596-44.1% ▼
Ursodeoxycholic acid445,116£800-33.5% ▼
Terbutaline sulphate4353£418-20.7% ▼
Glycopyrronium bromide431,560£1.4K+15.4% ▲
Erythromycin432,100£637+24.1% ▲
Powder preterm infant formula (0913111)4361.6K£995+170.0% ▲
Other toiletry preparations4325.6K£383+0.7% vs avg
43465£308+14.4% ▲
Glycerol42636£97+19.7% ▲
Aclidinium bromide/formoterol4267£2.1K+19.5% ▲
424,400£257-67.9% ▼
42460£237-2.6% ▼
Telmisartan412,212£662-29.3% ▼
Naratriptan hydrochloride41420£83+56.8% ▲
Ferrous gluconate412,310£67-14.3% ▼
Brinzolamide and timolol41370£489+8.5% ▲
Timolol412,260£549-53.6% ▼
4196£494+102.7% ▲
Zolmitriptan40462£1.7K-38.4% ▼
Sodium fluoride403,567£374+20.6% ▲
Powder extensively hydrolysed formula (0913101)40114.4K£3.3K-44.5% ▼
Valproic acid392,640£875-55.2% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake with fibre (0913021)3939.0K£979+182.5% ▲
391,540£88+55.1% ▲
Colesevelam hydrochloride387,920£3.1K+0.2% vs avg
Glimepiride381,722£51-58.8% ▼
381,823£378-23.1% ▼
Umeclidinium bromide3742£1.1K-40.0% ▼
Canagliflozin371,534£1.9K-74.2% ▼
Betamethasone esters371,970£226-38.7% ▼
37880£410-52.2% ▼
Hydralazine hydrochloride364,396£228-14.7% ▼
← Back to THE LIGHTHOUSE GROUP 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.