WATLING STREET SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 11
Practice Code: N81055 | NORTHWICH, CW9 5EX
Showing results 501-532 of 532
| Medication | Items (12m) ↓ | Quantity | Cost | vs National |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ibandronic acid | 13 | 13 | £15 | -64.2% ▼ |
| Powder 2.6 kcal/g dessert style (milk based) (0913011) | 13 | 364 | £384 | +59.5% ▲ |
| RtS 2 kcal/ml m/sk high protein, high energy+fibre (0913011) | 13 | 72.8K | £885 | +9.1% ▲ |
| Benzoyl peroxide and clindamycin phosphate | 13 | 810 | £311 | -80.6% ▼ |
| 13 | 447 | £229 | -65.0% ▼ | |
| 13 | 195 | £63 | +0.7% vs avg | |
| 13 | 65 | £188 | +39.0% ▲ | |
| Co-tenidone (Atenolol/chlortalidone) | 12 | 336 | £60 | -42.5% ▼ |
| Frovatriptan | 12 | 270 | £666 | -15.1% ▼ |
| Tetracycline | 12 | 644 | £470 | +156.6% ▲ |
| Betamethasone sodium phosphate | 12 | 962 | £124 | -2.4% ▼ |
| Tamsulosin and dutasteride hydrochloride | 12 | 336 | £212 | -65.7% ▼ |
| Magnesium aspartate | 12 | 480 | £432 | -20.8% ▼ |
| Magnesium citrate | 12 | 720 | £680 | +66.0% ▲ |
| Liquid OTC glucose for diabetic hypo treatment (0913541) | 12 | 5,400 | £84 | -47.6% ▼ |
| Diclofenac sodium | 12 | 1,200 | £64 | +12.8% ▲ |
| Fusidic acid | 12 | 70 | £241 | +16.2% ▲ |
| Lodoxamide trometamol | 12 | 120 | £60 | +96.7% ▲ |
| Light liquid paraffin | 12 | 6,000 | £99 | -64.7% ▼ |
| 12 | 2,200 | £58 | -7.0% ▼ | |
| 12 | 120 | £14 | -68.1% ▼ | |
| 12 | 70 | £192 | +113.0% ▲ | |
| Linaclotide | 11 | 308 | £393 | -39.8% ▼ |
| RtS 1.5kcal/ml m/sk, higher protein, pre-thickened (0913051) | 11 | 73.2K | £966 | +8.1% ▲ |
| 11 | 22 | £332 | +54.5% ▲ | |
| Irbesartan with diuretic | 10 | 280 | £57 | -36.4% ▼ |
| Formoterol/glycopyrronium/budesonide | 10 | 10 | £423 | -83.4% ▼ |
| Propylthiouracil | 10 | 1,008 | £683 | -20.4% ▼ |
| Norethisterone | 10 | 1,176 | £28 | -28.5% ▼ |
| Zinc sulfate monohydrate | 10 | 300 | £57 | +12.9% ▲ |
| 10 | 80 | £7 | -26.8% ▼ | |
| 10 | 50 | £8 | -65.5% ▼ |
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.