In Alberta, you can have a urinary tract infection assessed and treated by a pharmacist in roughly 15 minutes. Fully covered by Alberta Health Care. No appointment required. Here's when that's appropriate, and the few cases where you should head to your doctor instead.
Alberta pharmacists can treat UTIs
Under Alberta's Minor Ailment prescribing regulations, pharmacists with prescribing authorisation independently assess and prescribe for uncomplicated urinary tract infections. The visit takes about 15 minutes and is fully covered for anyone with a valid Alberta Health card.
What "uncomplicated" means
An uncomplicated UTI affects only the lower urinary tract (bladder and urethra) in an otherwise healthy, non-pregnant person.
Classic symptoms
- Burning or pain when urinating
- Increased frequency of urination
- Strong or sudden urge to go
- Pelvic pressure or discomfort
- Cloudy or strong-smelling urine
- Sensation that the bladder hasn't fully emptied
Cases that need a doctor instead
- Flank pain, fever above 38°C, nausea, or vomiting (signals possible kidney infection)
- UTI during pregnancy
- UTI in a diabetic, immunosuppressed, or anatomically abnormal urinary tract
- Recurrent UTIs (three or more per year)
- Recent hospitalisation or catheterisation
What the visit looks like
Walk in, no appointment needed. The pharmacist takes you to a private consultation room and works through symptom onset, prior UTI history, medical background, current medications, allergies, and pregnancy status. The clinical framework is the same one a family doctor would use.
Common antibiotics prescribed
- Nitrofurantoin (Macrobid): 100 mg twice daily for 5 to 7 days
- Fosfomycin (Monurol): single-dose option
What it costs
The pharmacist assessment is fully covered by Alberta Health Care. Antibiotic medications are typically covered under provincial and employer plans (Alberta Blue Cross, ABPHAP, NIHB, AISH, most private benefit plans). Without coverage, a typical antibiotic course runs under $30.
Pharmacist vs walk-in clinic
- Wait times: usually under 30 minutes here, vs 2 to 4 hours at a walk-in
- Same-visit dispensing: yes here, depends at a clinic
- Assessment cost: covered by AHC at both
- After-hours access: limited (Mon-Sat) here vs evening clinics
- Complicated cases: clinic better-positioned with imaging access
Recurrent UTIs
Three or more UTIs in a year warrant proper investigation. We identify the recurrence pattern and refer you to a family physician or urologist for the workup. Anatomical, behavioural, and hormonal factors all come into play.
Pregnancy
If you're pregnant or might be, contact your obstetrician or family doctor right away. UTIs in pregnancy carry an elevated risk of pyelonephritis and need physician oversight for safe antibiotic selection.
What if it isn't a UTI?
Bacterial vaginosis, yeast infections, product irritation, sexually transmitted infections, and interstitial cystitis can all mimic UTI symptoms. If symptoms haven't improved within 48 to 72 hours of starting antibiotics, come back, we adjust.
Ready?
Walk in to Acme Drug Mart, Unit 103, 15508 87 Ave NW, Edmonton. Or call (780) 443-0202 if you want to give us a heads-up.