THE MISBOURNE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 7

Practice Code: K82051 | GERRARDS CROSS, SL9 9RR

Showing results 301-350 of 629

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
679,950£1.6K+145.4% ▲
Ciprofloxacin661,211£129+65.5% ▲
Metronidazole651,173£78-1.1% vs avg
Midazolam hydrochloride65670£373+58.8% ▲
Sulfasalazine648,400£2.6K-50.8% ▼
648,841£333-24.8% ▼
Amiodarone hydrochloride632,415£129-2.3% ▼
Goserelin acetate6363£10.2K+43.0% ▲
Other multivitamin preparations631,921£491-63.5% ▼
Carbimazole623,524£444-45.1% ▼
Glycerol61869£131+73.9% ▲
Piracetam6129.3K£5.0K+370.3% ▲
Alprostadil61134£1.3K+256.7% ▲
Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake lower volume (0913011)61494.5K£7.5K-50.8% ▼
6130.1K£325-33.1% ▼
Hydrocortisone601,580£421-21.0% ▼
Desmopressin acetate604,185£2.6K+15.0% ▲
Emollient bath and shower preparations5922.2K£299-6.1% ▼
Bisacodyl572,418£160-56.5% ▼
57710£1.7K+172.9% ▲
Peppermint oil565,828£532-29.6% ▼
Fluticasone/umeclidinium/vilanterol5667£2.8K-76.1% ▼
Phenobarbital567,984£7.2K+82.1% ▲
Indometacin563,136£196+255.9% ▲
Betamethasone sodium phosphate56690£153+116.2% ▲
Benzydamine hydrochloride5619.4K£406-27.6% ▼
Tacrolimus562,400£1.8K+3.9% ▲
56349£1.3K-18.2% ▼
Fenofibrate552,354£232-43.2% ▼
Chlorphenamine maleate556,408£193-50.2% ▼
Betamethasone sodium phosphate55550£126+725.7% ▲
552,485£1.0K+35.6% ▲
Midazolam hydrochloride54240£5.5K+274.7% ▲
Ipratropium bromide5464£465+233.0% ▲
544,200£365-22.6% ▼
Coal tar5313.0K£282-27.2% ▼
Hydroxyzine hydrochloride522,870£89-2.4% ▼
Ondansetron hydrochloride523,480£1.2K+7.2% ▲
Opicapone512,436£4.8K+166.4% ▲
Olopatadine51310£294+16.3% ▲
Nebivolol501,918£351-52.8% ▼
Levonorgestrel4949£4.0K+29.8% ▲
Mefenamic acid493,198£680+8.5% ▲
491,520£443+119.4% ▲
494,550£621+175.9% ▲
Dexamethasone482,935£361+54.0% ▲
Travoprost48530£350+1.9% vs avg
485,720£12.1K-1.5% vs avg
481,520£652-37.9% ▼
Ursodeoxycholic acid466,464£2.3K-30.5% ▼
← Back to THE MISBOURNE 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.