THE NEW SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications

Practice Code: C86034 | MEXBOROUGH, S64 0DB

Over the last 12 months, THE NEW SURGERY prescribed 218,278 items across 591 different medications at a total cost of £1,425,689 to the NHS. Below is the complete list of all medications prescribed, sorted by volume.

MedicationItems (12m) ↑QuantityCostvs National
Simvastatin and ezetimibe10280£349+5.5% ▲
Nicotine10214£271-82.3% ▼
Oral rehydration salts10112£52-65.4% ▼
Olopatadine1070£62-77.2% ▼
Cyclopentolate hydrochloride1050£81+74.8% ▲
Fluorouracil (Sunscreen)10400£313-72.5% ▼
10152£196-69.1% ▼
1090£153-36.3% ▼
10160£343+66.4% ▲
10330£1.7K-13.9% ▼
Mianserin hydrochloride11616£1.1K+55.5% ▲
Midazolam hydrochloride1144£1.0K-23.7% ▼
Rifampicin11616£564+91.9% ▲
Methotrexate1144£677-63.1% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913011)11124.8K£1.1K-81.9% ▼
Terbinafine hydrochloride11338£76-70.4% ▼
11170£80-70.3% ▼
11435£38-34.9% ▼
1113£126-45.6% ▼
11172£219-54.6% ▼
11140£18-70.7% ▼
1111£99+10.0% ▲
1117£1.3K+10.3% ▲
114,050£736+9.5% ▲
11550£762+123.6% ▲
11315£751+4.7% ▲
Ursodeoxycholic acid121,440£160-81.9% ▼
Torasemide12168£78+6.9% ▲
Labetalol hydrochloride12672£94-47.2% ▼
Dosulepin hydrochloride12336£72-78.8% ▼
Flupentixol hydrochloride12336£17-63.4% ▼
Amantadine hydrochloride12672£171-56.9% ▼
Doxycycline monohydrate12672£390+10.5% ▲
Insulin glulisine1260£340-44.0% ▼
Triptorelin acetate1212£828-16.3% ▼
Tacrolimus12510£393-77.7% ▼
12125£227+9.6% ▲
12114£492+150.0% ▲
12720£721+175.0% ▲
1248£179+32.2% ▲
121,050£3.4K-6.1% ▼
12570£894+36.9% ▲
12280£836-21.2% ▼
Co-phenotrope (Diphenox hydrochloride/atropine sulfate)131,300£2.4K+58.8% ▲
Propafenone hydrochloride131,170£109+20.1% ▲
Irbesartan with diuretic13364£73-17.4% ▼
Valsartan with diuretic13728£687-1.9% vs avg
Chlordiazepoxide hydrochloride13585£73-10.2% ▼
Atomoxetine hydrochloride13364£710-61.6% ▼
Quinine bisulfate13260£48-66.5% ▼
← Back to THE NEW 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.