WATERSHIP DOWN HEALTH — All Prescriptions & Medications

Practice Code: J82639 | NEWBURY, RG20 5QX

Over the last 12 months, WATERSHIP DOWN HEALTH prescribed 401,837 items across 724 different medications at a total cost of £2,940,044 to the NHS. Below is the complete list of all medications prescribed, sorted by volume.

MedicationItems (12m) ↑QuantityCostvs National
Guanfacine10336£797-61.1% ▼
Acamprosate calcium101,512£170-71.3% ▼
Methadone hydrochloride101,000£9-98.9% ▼
Minocycline hydrochloride10504£137+76.1% ▲
Metronidazole10440£45+51.2% ▲
Phased formulations of ethinylestradiol10609£30+124.1% ▲
Avanafil10160£470+59.3% ▲
Other oral iron preparations10280£76+1.3% vs avg
Magnesium glycerophosphate10500£190-27.2% ▼
Pyridoxine hydrochloride10480£221-53.5% ▼
Prednisolone sodium phosphate10530£333-21.6% ▼
Carbomer 974P10190£81+23.5% ▲
Budesonide1010£102-35.7% ▼
Benzoyl peroxide10430£64-29.0% ▼
Benzalkonium chloride102,500£56-12.8% ▼
1050£57-69.5% ▼
10753£1.7K-43.3% ▼
1010£93+0.0% vs avg
1029£302+17.8% ▲
1070£47+126.0% ▲
10280£150+58.6% ▲
10180£529+95.4% ▲
10195£493+14.1% ▲
10140£535+49.1% ▲
10300£1.8K-13.1% ▼
Sodium citrate (Rectal)11204£134-20.3% ▼
Clonidine hydrochloride11956£74-39.8% ▼
Glycopyrronium/formoterol1111£340-56.5% ▼
Metformin hydrochloride/vildagliptin11630£356-32.7% ▼
Powder disc or non ACBS lactose free formula (0913352)1123.2K£462+41.2% ▲
Indometacin11700£47-30.1% ▼
Heparinoid111,375£75-58.1% ▼
Timolol and brimonidine1155£105-21.6% ▼
Acetylcysteine11150£1.2K+8.5% ▲
Mupirocin1133£44-6.3% ▼
Imiquimod11156£626+54.8% ▲
1123£846+21.2% ▲
1170£201+17.6% ▲
11420£297-66.7% ▼
111,300£261-57.3% ▼
11420£1.9K-75.7% ▼
11230£399+26.8% ▲
Acrivastine12288£84-2.6% ▼
Levomepromazine maleate12252£1.4K+30.7% ▲
Moclobemide121,080£479-7.4% ▼
Modafinil12360£631-42.4% ▼
Aspirin12501£26+22.1% ▲
Saxagliptin12336£360-64.1% ▼
Liothyronine sodium12644£1.4K-43.7% ▼
Prasterone12336£182+81.8% ▲
← Back to WATERSHIP DOWN HEALTH
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.