THE QUARTER JACK SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 8

Practice Code: J81034 | WIMBORNE, BH21 1AP

Showing results 351-400 of 713

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Erythromycin704,404£1.7K+102.1% ▲
Specialist food replacer rolls/baguettes (0913271)70121.9K£1.7K+189.8% ▲
Specialist food replacer flour type mixes (0913271)7073.5K£1.1K+206.6% ▲
Tiotropium bromide/olodaterol6882£2.5K+10.9% ▲
Naratriptan hydrochloride68671£129+160.1% ▲
Exemestane683,528£611+109.3% ▲
68809£892+110.2% ▲
685,409£10.3K+70.5% ▲
Nizatidine673,280£4.9K+94.7% ▲
671,147£416-34.4% ▼
672,500£619+355.4% ▲
Bezafibrate663,150£748+22.5% ▲
Nortriptyline665,900£256-54.6% ▼
Denosumab6666£12.1K+142.5% ▲
Ivermectin663,375£2.0K+210.4% ▲
Ivermectin65346£4.4K+566.1% ▲
Medroxyprogesterone acetate654,846£1.0K+69.8% ▲
6567.2K£3.7K+70.5% ▲
RtS 2-2.4 kcal/ml m/sk higher protein,higher energy(0913011)64402.4K£4.5K+46.3% ▲
641,117£810+62.4% ▲
648,130£300-8.3% ▼
Prednisolone631,572£171-12.4% ▼
Azelaic acid632,340£464+163.5% ▲
Budesonide6285£820+298.6% ▲
Levomepromazine hydrochloride61587£1.1K+165.0% ▲
Acamprosate calcium614,578£507+75.2% ▲
Diclofenac sodium613,100£2.3K+154.5% ▲
61773£1.4K+119.2% ▲
Alogliptin601,652£1.5K-76.3% ▼
Ready to serve 1.5 kcal/ml juice style (0913011)60254.8K£2.3K-1.3% vs avg
Etodolac603,048£1.5K+116.7% ▲
Theophylline593,920£2.0K-29.4% ▼
Glucose594,635£420+13.5% ▲
59534£573+89.4% ▲
5959£71+123.1% ▲
597,006£991+191.8% ▲
Nitrazepam582,263£118+11.6% ▲
Other multivitamin preparations582,664£442-66.4% ▼
Light liquid paraffin5829.6K£729+70.4% ▲
582,147£8.8K+218.1% ▲
Terbutaline sulphate5761£482+5.1% ▲
Adapalene572,655£922+160.4% ▲
Amorolfine hydrochloride57285£356+146.9% ▲
Mercaptopurine562,193£2.2K+261.7% ▲
Triamcinolone acetonide5661£429+446.6% ▲
Umeclidinium bromide5570£1.8K-10.8% ▼
Bicalutamide552,436£151+70.0% ▲
553,800£180+1.3% vs avg
Prucalopride542,212£832+38.7% ▲
Dutasteride543,240£183+5.2% ▲
← Back to THE QUARTER JACK 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.