WYCHALL LANE SURGERY — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 6

Practice Code: M85071 | BIRMINGHAM, B38 8TE

Showing results 251-300 of 563

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
Chloramphenicol79578£337-31.0% ▼
Hydrocortisone782,076£440+2.7% ▲
Ticagrelor786,160£6.0K-8.3% ▼
78488£1.2K+222.6% ▲
Umeclidinium bromide77108£2.8K+24.9% ▲
Dutasteride763,290£194+48.0% ▲
Calcium carbonate765,428£457+15.5% ▲
Irbesartan753,150£143-69.2% ▼
Insulin Lispro74517£3.7K-3.3% ▼
Latanoprost and timolol743,045£1.4K-3.1% ▼
Typhoid7474£763-17.8% ▼
728,110£447+3.2% ▲
723,470£14.7K+59.2% ▲
Rizatriptan71642£1.8K+19.4% ▲
Carbimazole714,336£507-37.1% ▼
Testosterone713,358£2.1K-6.9% ▼
Procyclidine hydrochloride703,612£153-50.5% ▼
Lymecycline704,284£489-41.8% ▼
7070£330+36.5% ▲
Ispaghula husk693,802£672-47.6% ▼
Sodium chloride694,380£3.0K+132.0% ▲
Co-trimoxazole(Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole)681,496£86+69.3% ▲
Metronidazole681,123£76+3.5% ▲
Desmopressin acetate684,016£3.8K+30.4% ▲
686,380£4.6K+105.6% ▲
Other soothing haemorrhoidal preparations661,650£151+1,920.0% ▲
Donepezil hydrochloride662,331£881-78.6% ▼
Ropinirole hydrochloride653,890£2.6K-38.8% ▼
Ciprofloxacin651,626£125+63.0% ▲
Cefalexin633,051£223-45.8% ▼
Mefenamic acid633,728£724+39.5% ▲
Lorazepam624,046£774-56.5% ▼
Glycerol61890£134+73.9% ▲
Tranexamic acid613,755£252-28.0% ▼
Alfuzosin hydrochloride613,687£772-14.7% ▼
Ipratropium bromide602,662£998+108.7% ▲
Azathioprine605,208£126-44.6% ▼
591,355£5.8K+97.5% ▲
Combined ethinylestradiol 20mcg581,506£1.7K+11.0% ▲
Hepatitis A5858£1.1K-23.6% ▼
Diclofenac sodium572,973£219+12.3% ▲
5731.7K£326-37.5% ▼
573,770£12.5K+51.6% ▲
Metoprolol tartrate565,796£1.3K+10.4% ▲
Tiotropium bromide/olodaterol5671£2.2K-8.7% ▼
Indacaterol/glycopyrronium561,680£1.7K+24.0% ▲
Diclofenac sodium553,000£2.2K+129.5% ▲
Other toiletry preparations5523.9K£446+28.8% ▲
Enalapril maleate542,800£72-69.9% ▼
Terbinafine hydrochloride542,982£1.1K-12.6% ▼
← Back to WYCHALL LANE 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.