THE NEW SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: E85042 | LONDON, W12 9RD

Showing results 351-400 of 451

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Powder amino acid formula (0913107)2060.8K£3.8K-39.4% ▼
Etoricoxib20924£168-75.2% ▼
Carmellose sodium201,470£207-69.1% ▼
Azithromycin19353£90-85.0% ▼
Dexamethasone191,653£328-39.0% ▼
Goserelin acetate1919£4.1K-56.9% ▼
Timolol191,023£245-78.5% ▼
Azelaic acid19660£125-20.5% ▼
Permethrin191,168£310-49.6% ▼
Hepatitis A/hepatitis B1919£578+12.3% ▲
Other toiletry preparations199,500£127-55.5% ▼
191,800£5.9K-49.5% ▼
Daridorexant18540£718+37.7% ▲
Perampanel18126£601-16.9% ▼
Erythromycin181,112£450-48.0% ▼
Amorolfine hydrochloride1890£116-22.0% ▼
Halogenated phenols with phenol187,200£155+334.5% ▲
184,400£63-28.4% ▼
Zonisamide172,716£1.2K-61.0% ▼
Medroxyprogesterone acetate171,344£315-55.6% ▼
Powder extensively hydrolysed formula (0913101)1743.2K£1.2K-76.4% ▼
Benzalkonium chloride175,500£123+48.2% ▲
17795£175+93.4% ▲
17260£162-60.6% ▼
Prucalopride16700£596-58.9% ▼
Nicorandil161,600£261-88.9% ▼
Ready to serve 2.4 kcal/ml milkshake lower volume (0913021)1630.8K£1.2K+76.9% ▲
Colchicine16644£13-79.5% ▼
Pimecrolimus16510£316-5.5% ▼
Fluorouracil (Sunscreen)16610£511-56.1% ▼
Hepatitis B1616£194+51.2% ▲
1640£273-42.5% ▼
16549£88-52.1% ▼
Lidocaine hydrochloride15498£61+227.0% ▲
Metoprolol tartrate151,120£110-70.4% ▼
Ticagrelor15840£819-82.4% ▼
Powder 1.5 kcal/ml smoothie plant based (0913011)15126£127+39.0% ▲
Powder 1.6 kcal/ml milkshake (0913011)15518£269-79.9% ▼
Powder thickener - gum based (0913161)1514.1K£954-80.0% ▼
Clomipramine hydrochloride141,456£365-66.8% ▼
Ivermectin1497£1.2K+43.5% ▲
Magnesium aspartate14470£422-7.6% ▼
Betamethasone esters14940£112-76.8% ▼
Ivermectin14630£365-34.2% ▼
Aciclovir14100£96+13.6% ▲
141,230£2.4K-64.9% ▼
14840£62-82.6% ▼
14530£1.3K-25.0% ▼
Linaclotide13364£464-28.8% ▼
Pentoxifylline13780£161+3.8% ▲
← 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.