Wisconsin couple sues Walgreens and Optum Rx, saying son died after $500
price rise for asthma meds
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[February 06, 2025]
By TODD RICHMOND
LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) — A Wisconsin couple is suing Walgreens and a
pharmacy benefits management company, alleging that their son died
because he couldn't afford a sudden $500 spike in his asthma medication.
Shanon and William Schmidtknecht, of Poynette, filed their lawsuit in
federal court in Milwaukee on Jan. 21, a year to the day that their son
Cole died at age 22.
According to the lawsuit, Cole Schmidtknecht suffered from asthma all
his life. He managed it with daily inhaler doses of the medication
Advair Diskus and its generic equivalents.
He stopped at a Walgreens pharmacy in Appleton on Jan. 10, 2024, to
refill his prescription and was told the cost had jumped from $66 to
$539 out-of-pocket. Unable to afford the new cost, he left the pharmacy
without the medication. He tried to manage his condition with his rescue
inhaler but suffered a fatal asthma attack days later, according to the
lawsuit.
The Schmidtknechts allege that pharmacy benefits management company
OptumRX violated Wisconsin law by raising the cost of the medication
without a valid medical reason and failing to provide 30 days' advance
notice of drug price increases.
Pharmacy benefits managers act as intermediaries between health
insurance companies, prescription drug companies and pharmacies. Optum
Rx services prescription claims for more than 66 million people across
the United States, according to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit alleges that the Walgreens pharmacy staffers failed to offer
Cole any workarounds to obtain his usual medication. They told him there
were no cheaper alternatives or generic medications available, they
didn't contact OptumRx to request an exception on Cole's behalf, and
they didn't ask Cole's doctor to request an exception for him, his
parents contend.
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This undated photo provided by Shanon Schmidtknecht shows Cole
Schmidtknecht of Appleton, Wis., who died of an asthma attack on
Jan. 21, 2024. (Shanon Schmidtknecht via AP)
 The lawsuit seeks unspecified
damages.
“The conduct of both OptumRx and Walgreens was deplorable,” one of
the family's attorneys, Michael Trunk, said in a statement. “The
evidence in this case will show that both OptumRx and Walgreens put
profits first, and are directly responsible for Cole’s death."
OptumRx spokespeople didn't immediately reply to Wednesday messages
seeking comment. In a statement last April extending sympathy to the
family, the company said that a review of Cole's claims showed that
on the day he visited the pharmacy, he did buy a different asthma
medication, generic Albuterol, for a $5 co-pay on Jan. 10 — a
medication that it says he also obtained in October 2023. His case
was handled “consistent with industry practice and the patient's
insurance plan design,” the company said.
Trunk, though, said Wednesday that the $5 generic prescription Cole
filled was for his rescue inhaler, not the Advair Diskus inhaler
that he took daily. He said Cole was not able to fill his Advair
Diskus prescription because it had suddenly become too expensive.
Walgreens officials didn't immediately respond to a Wednesday email
seeking comment on the lawsuit.
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