DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy14040098 ISSN: 2226-4787

Coordinated Primary-Care Access in Rural and Suburban Alberta, with a Contextual Comparison to Rural Wyoming: A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis of Community Pharmacist–Family Physician Care Models

Tomasz Karczewski, Jennifer M. L. Stephens, Dawid Karczewski, Sahar Feizizadeh, Dhwani Dixit, Mihaela Olsen

Background/Objectives: Primary-care access in Alberta, Canada, is shaped by geography, attachment, timeliness, continuity, and local service capacity. Rural communities may face travel burden, workforce fragility, and intermittent services, whereas suburban communities may have nearby facilities but still experience delayed access, low attachment, and fragmented episodic care. Rural Wyoming has some similar geographic and workforce constraints, although the jurisdictions differ in financing, regulation, and pharmacist scope. This systematic review and narrative synthesis examined evidence on coordinated community pharmacist–family physician care in rural and suburban Alberta and considered, separately, the contextual relevance of the findings to rural Wyoming and comparable frontier settings. Methods: We searched PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus, CINAHL, and the Cochrane Library using controlled vocabulary and free-text terms to identify English-language peer-reviewed studies and practice-relevant evidence published from 1 January 2010 to 19 April 2026. Two authors screened titles/abstracts and full texts and resolved decisions by consensus. Methodological appraisal used design-appropriate Critical Appraisal Skills Programme criteria, and outcome-level certainty was considered using GRADE domains. Results: Thirty-four eligible peer-reviewed or practice-evaluation records were included in the narrative synthesis, and seven official contextual or methodological sources supported jurisdictional interpretation. Evidence was strongest for hypertension, cardiovascular risk reduction, medication management, and chronic disease monitoring. No included study directly compared the same intervention in Alberta and Wyoming; evidence for emergency-department effects and equivalent effectiveness across settings was limited. Conclusions: Coordinated pharmacist–family physician care may extend access to selected medication-related and chronic disease services when supported by documentation, referral, follow-up, and red-flag protocols. Application to Wyoming should be treated as a context-dependent proposition requiring local adaptation and prospective evaluation, not as demonstrated transferability or a substitute for physician-led longitudinal primary care.

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