THE WRITTLE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 5

Practice Code: F81098 | CHELMSFORD, CM1 3EH

Showing results 201-250 of 568

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Timolol1171,575£470+32.3% ▲
Typhoid117117£1.2K+29.9% ▲
117284£247+215.8% ▲
Oxybutynin1156,460£1.3K-39.6% ▼
Zolpidem tartrate1141,582£74+26.5% ▲
Olanzapine1142,030£152-69.2% ▼
Semaglutide1142,643£9.0K-52.7% ▼
Ispaghula husk1135,160£869-14.2% ▼
Mometasone furoate1136,700£644-15.5% ▼
Insulin Lispro112924£5.4K+46.4% ▲
Dexamethasone111560£344-35.4% ▼
Co-dydramol (Dihydrocodeine/paracetamol)11012.0K£705-38.8% ▼
Tirzepatide110114£9.9K-43.4% ▼
Fludrocortisone acetate1103,275£582+4.3% ▲
Clomipramine hydrochloride1062,254£438+151.4% ▲
Hepatitis A104104£2.0K+37.0% ▲
Timolol and travoprost102338£1.1K+215.6% ▲
Insulin detemir101560£4.5K+29.0% ▲
Testosterone1003,983£2.2K+31.1% ▲
Buprenorphine99420£901-73.0% ▼
Clobetasol propionate995,605£446-27.4% ▼
Cyclizine hydrochloride984,095£145-39.3% ▼
Dulaglutide98420£7.4K-14.5% ▼
Baclofen987,024£154-51.1% ▼
97202£800+372.8% ▲
96488£18.7K+168.8% ▲
Donepezil hydrochloride951,904£76-69.2% ▼
Canagliflozin951,712£2.1K-33.8% ▼
Tadalafil941,344£236-44.7% ▼
Leuprorelin acetate9393£15.3K+100.7% ▲
Dihydrocodeine tartrate927,662£504-52.9% ▼
Carbomer 940/980921,790£346-39.6% ▼
Ticagrelor915,096£4.8K+7.0% ▲
Metronidazole913,645£974+142.2% ▲
Risperidone892,674£1.2K-64.8% ▼
Calcium carbonate892,647£328+35.3% ▲
Carvedilol882,660£76-22.4% ▼
88790£235-57.9% ▼
Nicotine871,857£2.0K+54.0% ▲
Brimonidine tartrate87550£258+117.9% ▲
Clobetasone butyrate874,100£381-57.4% ▼
Clarithromycin851,831£417-65.4% ▼
85611£1.3K+93.3% ▲
Dorzolamide831,600£837-0.1% vs avg
8235.0K£515-68.9% ▼
Rivastigmine811,954£1.6K+17.7% ▲
81418£269+341.9% ▲
Co-beneldopa (Benserazide/levodopa)809,500£642-47.1% ▼
Biphasic isophane insulin79562£2.3K-29.2% ▼
Co-amilofruse (Amiloride hydrochloride/frusemide)781,729£263+124.2% ▲
← Back to THE WRITTLE 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.