Most Albertans know pharmacists fill prescriptions. Fewer know that in Alberta, pharmacists can write the prescription in the first place. Assess the condition, choose the treatment, dispense it, all in one visit, no referral, no doctor required. Here's the actual scope.
Alberta was first
In 2007, Alberta became the first Canadian province to grant pharmacists independent prescribing authority through Additional Prescribing Authorization (APA). Unlike other provinces, which restrict pharmacist prescribing to a narrow list of approved conditions, Alberta took a different path: no restrictive condition list. APA pharmacists exercise clinical judgement across a broad range of presentations, held to the same standard of care as any prescriber.
What "prescribing" actually covers
An APA pharmacist can:
- Initiate new prescriptions for conditions within their competence
- Adapt existing prescriptions (adjust dose, change formulation, substitute equivalents)
- Renew prescriptions when the original prescriber is unavailable
- Prescribe for chronic disease management ongoing
What we can't prescribe: narcotics, controlled substances, or medications outside our area of competence. That last one matters, scope of competence is judgement-based, not a hard list.
How Alberta compares
Most provinces limit pharmacist prescribing to between 19 and 80 defined minor ailments. BC sits around 32, Ontario around 19, Quebec around 80. Alberta has no condition restrictions, the broadest model in the country.
Lab tests we can order
APA pharmacists can order relevant laboratory tests directly:
- Blood glucose and HbA1c
- Lipid panels
- Renal and thyroid function
- INR and drug levels
This matters because it removes a step. You don't have to wait for a physician requisition to monitor your own chronic conditions.
Injections and vaccinations
Authorised to administer:
- Vaccines: influenza, COVID-19, travel vaccines, shingles, and more
- Vitamin B12 injections
- Prescribed injectable medications including GLP-1 receptor agonists
Point-of-care testing
Rapid strep tests, influenza tests, blood glucose monitoring, blood pressure measurement, urinalysis. The rapid strep example shows the model: instead of waiting days for a doctor's appointment, you walk into a pharmacy, get tested, and walk out with a prescription if antibiotics are warranted, same visit.
Chronic disease management
Within APA scope:
- Type 2 diabetes (initiating and adjusting agents, monitoring HbA1c)
- Hypertension (titrating medications, monitoring blood pressure)
- Dyslipidemia (initiating statins, ordering lipid panels)
- Thyroid conditions (TSH monitoring, dose adaptation)
- Asthma and COPD (technique assessment, therapy adjustment)
- Anticoagulation (warfarin therapy and INR management)
Smoking cessation
Pharmacists prescribe nicotine replacement therapy, varenicline (Champix), and bupropion (Zyban), with counselling, quit-date setting, and follow-up.
Contraception and reproductive health
APA pharmacists prescribe hormonal contraceptives (pills, patch, ring) and emergency contraception. Methods that require a procedure (IUDs, implants) need a physician or nurse practitioner referral, but we can prescribe and coordinate the insertion appointment.
Referrals
Pharmacists formally refer patients to physicians, emergency departments, or specialists when the situation warrants. This is part of the model, not a workaround. Coordinated care, not fragmented care.
What the research shows
A University of Alberta study published April 2026 examined community pharmacy care clinics, tracking 3,305 unique patients across nearly 5,000 visits at one location. The model reduced pressure on walk-in clinics, emergency departments, and family physician offices. Alberta now operates over 100 community pharmacy care clinics.
When to see a pharmacist instead of a doctor
Pharmacists fit these well:
- Common infections: UTIs, strep throat, skin infections, cold sores, yeast infections
- Prescription renewals
- Starting or adjusting chronic-condition medications
- Travel medicine and vaccines
- Contraception start or renewal
- Smoking cessation
- Weight management medication
- Drug interaction and dosing questions
See a physician for: imaging-required conditions, surgical assessment, complex diagnostic workup, serious or life-threatening symptoms.
Common questions
Do pharmacists need referrals?
No. APA pharmacists assess and prescribe independently.
Are prescriptions covered?
The pharmacist's assessment fee varies by plan. The prescription itself is covered on standard formulary terms.
Can pharmacists manage diabetes or blood pressure long term?
Yes. Chronic disease management is explicitly within APA scope.
How do I know if my pharmacist has APA?
Ask. APA is a specific designation registered with the Alberta College of Pharmacy.
Does my doctor get informed?
Pharmacists communicate with primary care providers when appropriate, with patient consent.
Walk in or call
(780) 443-0202. Unit 103, 15508 87 Ave NW, Meadowlark Place, Edmonton.