THE NEW SURGERY CHESHAM — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 12
Practice Code: K82024 | CHESHAM, HP5 3EZ
Showing results 551-587 of 587
| Medication | Items (12m) ↓ | Quantity | Cost | vs National |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Analgesics with anti-emetics | 12 | 576 | £210 | -15.2% ▼ |
| Rimegepant | 12 | 248 | £3.2K | +22.3% ▲ |
| Cenobamate | 12 | 784 | £4.9K | -50.5% ▼ |
| Phenytoin | 12 | 3,340 | £210 | +9.3% ▲ |
| Itraconazole | 12 | 690 | £367 | -10.6% ▼ |
| Lanthanum carbonate | 12 | 1,080 | £2.2K | +46.3% ▲ |
| Powder 1 - 2.2 kcal/ml soup (0913011) | 12 | 364 | £305 | +56.2% ▲ |
| RtS 1.4 - 2 kcal/g dessert style (milk based) (0913011) | 12 | 43.0K | £619 | -68.6% ▼ |
| Timolol and brimonidine | 12 | 150 | £271 | -14.5% ▼ |
| Nepafenac | 12 | 110 | £312 | +93.2% ▲ |
| Tioconazole | 12 | 144 | £282 | +155.0% ▲ |
| 12 | 45 | £720 | -13.1% ▼ | |
| 12 | 60 | £122 | +1.8% vs avg | |
| 12 | 900 | £2.8K | +14.4% ▲ | |
| 12 | 390 | £2.2K | +37.5% ▲ | |
| Ursodeoxycholic acid | 11 | 1,260 | £920 | -83.4% ▼ |
| Labetalol hydrochloride | 11 | 532 | £63 | -51.6% ▼ |
| Tacrolimus | 11 | 800 | £990 | -58.9% ▼ |
| Tube feed 1.2 kcal/ml with fibre (0914021) | 11 | 330.0K | £5.7K | -13.4% ▼ |
| Alkyl sulphate | 11 | 2,596 | £70 | +19.0% ▲ |
| Medicated stockings | 11 | 52 | £197 | +63.2% ▲ |
| 11 | 24 | £62 | -54.6% ▼ | |
| 11 | 271 | £303 | +138.9% ▲ | |
| 11 | 660 | £2.1K | -23.1% ▼ | |
| Zinc oxide | 10 | 226 | £30 | -51.7% ▼ |
| Formoterol fumarate | 10 | 11 | £253 | -30.3% ▼ |
| Naratriptan hydrochloride | 10 | 96 | £18 | -61.8% ▼ |
| Fosfomycin trometamol | 10 | 12 | £56 | -64.9% ▼ |
| Insulin glulisine | 10 | 70 | £396 | -53.4% ▼ |
| Glucagon | 10 | 15 | £296 | -34.3% ▼ |
| Cabergoline | 10 | 120 | £207 | -35.5% ▼ |
| Pimecrolimus | 10 | 510 | £299 | -40.9% ▼ |
| 10 | 41 | £108 | -50.5% ▼ | |
| 10 | 300 | £540 | -32.7% ▼ | |
| 10 | 100 | £300 | -50.9% ▼ | |
| 10 | 300 | £1.1K | +59.9% ▲ | |
| 10 | 750 | £1.3K | -4.8% ▼ |
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.