WHITE HOUSE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 6

Practice Code: G82069 | FOLKESTONE, CT19 4PU

Showing results 251-300 of 616

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Insulin detemir92780£6.6K+17.5% ▲
Tamoxifen citrate923,805£333+11.7% ▲
Ciprofloxacin912,362£216+128.2% ▲
Betamethasone esters915,720£671+50.8% ▲
Ispaghula husk904,980£980-31.7% ▼
Melatonin907,394£660-72.9% ▼
Timolol and bimatoprost902,076£1.8K-40.7% ▼
Lorazepam893,754£525-37.6% ▼
Tiotropium bromide/olodaterol88120£3.7K+43.5% ▲
Glimepiride883,414£101-4.6% ▼
Hepatitis A8888£1.5K+15.9% ▲
Biphasic isophane insulin87695£3.0K-22.0% ▼
Carmellose sodium866,630£934+32.7% ▲
841,700£1.2K+8.6% ▲
Alfuzosin hydrochloride832,838£1.1K+16.0% ▲
Fentanyl82882£2.7K-20.0% ▼
Calcipotriol826,240£3.3K-51.8% ▼
Ranolazine806,646£1.2K-52.9% ▼
80840£2.2K+67.3% ▲
Etoricoxib793,640£931-1.9% vs avg
Rabeprazole sodium784,004£396+51.2% ▲
Amiodarone hydrochloride782,457£135+20.9% ▲
Latanoprost and timolol78655£691+2.2% ▲
Lisdexamfetamine dimesylate772,212£5.2K-35.5% ▼
Isophane insulin77500£2.2K-27.1% ▼
Estriol771,125£1.3K-63.8% ▼
Travoprost771,033£310+63.4% ▲
Flecainide acetate765,874£246-2.7% ▼
Clomipramine hydrochloride765,021£1.1K+80.3% ▲
Lymecycline764,431£514-36.8% ▼
Sodium chloride7610.7K£993+221.1% ▲
Timolol and travoprost76243£1.1K+135.2% ▲
Valproic acid754,680£1.5K-13.8% ▼
Ropinirole hydrochloride754,004£1.9K-29.4% ▼
Sodium bicarbonate7511.5K£514-18.8% ▼
Ketoconazole7510.1K£1.7K-23.6% ▼
7516.7K£1.7K+55.6% ▲
Risperidone745,326£297-70.8% ▼
Glucose746,780£600+42.3% ▲
Tafluprost and timolol742,700£1.3K+285.5% ▲
Typhoid7474£764-17.8% ▼
Bisacodyl734,666£306-44.3% ▼
Metoprolol tartrate733,696£617+43.9% ▲
Fluticasone furoate/vilanterol7192£2.3K-54.1% ▼
Domperidone716,161£137+99.1% ▲
Mefenamic acid714,863£969+57.2% ▲
711,308£1.3K+116.4% ▲
Oxazepam702,398£285+228.5% ▲
Lithium carbonate701,848£409-44.8% ▼
Cinnarizine706,430£292+49.6% ▲
← Back to WHITE HOUSE 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.