THE ROTHERHAM VIRTUAL WARD — All Prescriptions & Medications
Practice Code: Y07734 | ROTHERHAM, S60 2UD
Over the last 12 months, THE ROTHERHAM VIRTUAL WARD prescribed 979 items across 32 different medications at a total cost of £9,259 to the NHS. Below is the complete list of all medications prescribed, sorted by volume.
| Medication | Items (12m) ↓ | Quantity | Cost | vs National |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potassium chloride | 73 | 1,710 | £196 | +290.5% ▲ |
| Doxycycline hyclate | 61 | 475 | £47 | -88.1% ▼ |
| Amoxicillin | 55 | 2,191 | £73 | -94.1% ▼ |
| Paracetamol | 40 | 5,104 | £180 | -98.1% ▼ |
| Furosemide | 34 | 990 | £18 | -97.7% ▼ |
| Prednisolone | 33 | 1,003 | £37 | -95.9% ▼ |
| Salbutamol | 24 | 164 | £171 | -99.0% ▼ |
| Docusate sodium | 23 | 1,830 | £150 | -93.8% ▼ |
| Senna | 23 | 949 | £30 | -96.2% ▼ |
| Clarithromycin | 22 | 532 | £112 | -91.0% ▼ |
| Morphine sulfate | 21 | 2,170 | £75 | -96.8% ▼ |
| Nystatin | 21 | 630 | £36 | -79.2% ▼ |
| Magnesium aspartate | 20 | 104 | £182 | +32.1% ▲ |
| Midodrine hydrochloride | 19 | 1,205 | £264 | -61.0% ▼ |
| Co-amoxiclav (Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid) | 19 | 1,449 | £79 | -87.6% ▼ |
| Macrogol 3350 | 18 | 554 | £531 | -98.1% ▼ |
| Spironolactone | 18 | 352 | £185 | -96.7% ▼ |
| Flucloxacillin sodium | 18 | 2,208 | £74 | -96.0% ▼ |
| Haloperidol | 17 | 168 | £1.2K | -64.3% ▼ |
| Hyoscine hydrobromide | 16 | 140 | £2.5K | +26.2% ▲ |
| Midazolam hydrochloride | 16 | 140 | £77 | -60.9% ▼ |
| Prochlorperazine maleate | 15 | 328 | £52 | -92.6% ▼ |
| Trimethoprim | 15 | 850 | £49 | -92.7% ▼ |
| Famotidine | 14 | 462 | £238 | -97.1% ▼ |
| Buprenorphine | 13 | 48 | £190 | -96.5% ▼ |
| Nitrofurantoin | 13 | 114 | £55 | -97.3% ▼ |
| Ibuprofen | 13 | 850 | £31 | -97.4% ▼ |
| 13 | 13 | £80 | -94.5% ▼ | |
| Lactulose | 11 | 5,010 | £47 | -96.7% ▼ |
| Water for injection | 11 | 96 | £74 | -67.5% ▼ |
| Bumetanide | 10 | 408 | £37 | -96.3% ▼ |
| Diamorphine hydrochloride (Systemic) | 10 | 65 | £167 | +50.1% ▲ |
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.