Ontario allowing pharmacists to treat more conditions, administer more vaccines
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TORONTO – Ontario pharmacists will soon be allowed to administer more vaccines and treat more common ailments, as part of the government’s continuing moves to expand their scope of practice.
Health Minister Sylvia Jones says it will help people get faster access to care and ease pressure on primary care and emergency departments.
Starting this July, pharmacists will be able to give publicly funded vaccinations for tetanus, whooping cough, diphtheria, respiratory syncytial virus, shingles and pneumococcal vaccines. Some pharmacies were already able to offer vaccines such as those for RSV and shingles to people who paid out of pocket for them.
The provincial government has already allowed pharmacists to assess and treat 19 common ailments, and is now planning to add nine more, including head lice, nasal congestion, ringworm and warts.
Jones says there are plans to add five more to that list in early 2027.
The government has also directed Ontario’s regulatory colleges for optometrists, physiotherapists, chiropractors, dental hygienists, denturists, and audiologists and speech-language pathologists to develop frameworks for expansions to those professions’ scopes of practice.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 11, 2026.