THE OLD SCHOOL SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 6

Practice Code: L81075 | BRISTOL, BS16 2JD

Showing results 251-300 of 598

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Ursodeoxycholic acid1347,208£2.4K+102.5% ▲
Levonorgestrel132132£10.4K+249.8% ▲
Risedronate sodium129700£182+6.3% ▲
Clotrimazole127750£1.4K+15.1% ▲
Brivaracetam1264,046£9.4K+270.4% ▲
Clobazam1255,677£1.8K+89.6% ▲
Temazepam1244,929£3.3K+116.8% ▲
Topiramate1249,274£711-30.2% ▼
Metronidazole1232,074£245+87.2% ▲
Nicotine1226,056£3.7K+116.0% ▲
Tacrolimus1215,580£4.4K+124.4% ▲
1211,350£4.2K+494.3% ▲
Nystatin1193,750£215+18.0% ▲
Hydrocortisone1196,936£2.6K+40.9% ▲
1191,510£606+176.0% ▲
Fluconazole118935£410+52.6% ▲
Alfacalcidol1185,850£802-4.6% ▼
Dorzolamide and timolol1154,165£2.2K-19.6% ▼
Chlorphenamine maleate1148,058£251+3.3% ▲
11315.0K£720-59.1% ▼
111116£509+116.4% ▲
Phenytoin sodium1101,400£337+36.2% ▲
Tizanidine hydrochloride1102,328£189+315.3% ▲
Ibuprofen1085,986£170-11.4% ▼
Chloramphenicol108788£461-5.7% ▼
Ivabradine1075,544£1.0K+12.6% ▲
Metoclopramide hydrochloride1073,600£231+29.1% ▲
Azathioprine1077,665£201-1.3% vs avg
Sodium bicarbonate1076,480£303+15.8% ▲
Betahistine hydrochloride1068,962£285-55.6% ▼
Tadalafil1061,926£369-37.7% ▼
Brinzolamide/brimonidine106870£1.5K+209.0% ▲
Metronidazole1044,400£452+1,472.6% ▲
Hypromellose1041,280£183-21.5% ▼
104445£26.2K+191.2% ▲
Ispaghula husk1015,107£883-23.3% ▼
Tamoxifen citrate1012,662£223+22.6% ▲
Adapalene1014,590£1.6K+361.4% ▲
Benzoyl peroxide and clindamycin phosphate1004,650£1.9K+49.2% ▲
1002,450£1.8K+283.8% ▲
Insulin Lispro96648£5.0K+25.5% ▲
Trospium chloride962,460£897+88.0% ▲
Clobetasol propionate946,940£551-31.1% ▼
Verapamil hydrochloride932,324£471+2.5% ▲
Neomycin sulfate931,485£188+56.9% ▲
Travoprost92405£257+95.2% ▲
Haloperidol911,417£8.4K+91.1% ▲
Valproic acid914,980£1.3K+4.6% ▲
Rizatriptan91876£2.2K+53.1% ▲
Nebivolol892,366£1.0K-16.0% ▼
← Back to THE OLD SCHOOL 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.