THE NEAMAN PRACTICE — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 5

Practice Code: F84640 | LONDON, EC1A 7HF

Showing results 201-250 of 507

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml milkshake (0913011)71555.6K£3.7K-50.0% ▼
Sodium cromoglicate71954£235-23.6% ▼
Colchicine702,410£50-10.2% ▼
Hydralazine hydrochloride691,701£100+63.5% ▲
Dutasteride682,310£141+32.4% ▲
Cyclizine hydrochloride673,426£142-58.5% ▼
Azelaic acid662,610£505+176.1% ▲
66573£1.4K+370.7% ▲
Betamethasone esters653,500£483+7.7% ▲
Umeclidinium bromide/vilanterol6481£2.5K-67.2% ▼
Adapalene and benzoyl peroxide643,240£1.4K+19.8% ▲
Lercanidipine hydrochloride623,388£333-90.0% ▼
Hydroxocobalamin62368£791-87.1% ▼
Chloramphenicol62510£297-45.9% ▼
Miconazole nitrate622,560£394-12.4% ▼
Loratadine614,046£90-70.8% ▼
Hyoscine butylbromide602,648£190-74.3% ▼
Hydrocortisone601,498£369-21.0% ▼
Sulfasalazine598,256£1.2K-54.7% ▼
Clonazepam591,692£207-62.1% ▼
Neomycin sulfate59900£114-0.5% vs avg
Flecainide acetate585,112£196-25.7% ▼
Tamoxifen citrate583,150£375-29.6% ▼
Hepatitis A5858£1.2K-23.6% ▼
Ticagrelor574,088£4.0K-33.0% ▼
Prochlorperazine maleate572,111£179-71.8% ▼
Nystatin572,430£139-43.5% ▼
571,065£353-72.7% ▼
Tirzepatide56116£12.2K-71.2% ▼
Olopatadine56510£494+27.7% ▲
Tacrolimus552,250£1.7K+2.0% ▲
5560£57-75.0% ▼
55700£474+27.6% ▲
Lorazepam541,960£227-62.1% ▼
Clotrimazole54397£544-51.1% ▼
Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake lower volume (0913011)54479.0K£6.5K-56.4% ▼
Amiloride hydrochloride533,136£1.5K+110.6% ▲
537,280£294-37.8% ▼
539,920£1.5K+36.1% ▲
Lymecycline523,136£359-56.8% ▼
Medroxyprogesterone acetate521,440£303+35.9% ▲
Hydroxycarbamide52564£94+80.3% ▲
529,490£313-25.5% ▼
Repaglinide512,504£143+110.9% ▲
Ibuprofen514,120£104-58.2% ▼
Testosterone503,926£2.1K-34.5% ▼
Carmellose sodium504,140£582-22.8% ▼
Risedronate sodium49512£1.4K-59.6% ▼
Brinzolamide49480£382-62.3% ▼
Dorzolamide492,080£941-41.0% ▼
← Back to THE NEAMAN 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.