A Farmer Secretly Paid for His Neighbors’ Prescriptions for Years
Hody
Childress brought cash every month to a pharmacist in Alabama, asking
her to use it to help people buy medicine. The town learned of the
arrangement only after his death.
Hody
Childress and his daughter, Tania Nix. Mr. Childress made anonymous
cash donations to the pharmacy Geraldine Drugs, helping neighbors
struggling to pay for prescription medicine.Credit...Ronald Nix
When
the doctor saw what a hornet sting had done to Eli Schlageter, 15,
causing his mouth and throat to swell, his advice to Eli’s parents was
unequivocal: Get an EpiPen.
But they
were stunned to learn that a single dose of the lifesaving drug, used to
treat severe allergic reactions, cost $800 — even with insurance
coverage — at their local pharmacy in Geraldine, Ala., a farm town about
60 miles southeast of Huntsville.
The
pharmacist, Brooke Walker, found a coupon to knock off a few hundred
dollars from the total. But Eli’s mother, Bree Schlageter, still balked
at the price. So, to help the family, Dr. Walker turned to an envelope
full of carefully folded hundred-dollar bills from an anonymous donor.
Every
month for more than a decade, a local farmer, Hody Childress, had made
anonymous cash donations to the pharmacy, Geraldine Drugs, aiming to
help neighbors struggling to pay for prescription medication. The wider
community learned of his good deed only after he died at 80 in January.
Now, his family and donors from across the United States have vowed to
continue his legacy.
“I think he felt like he couldn’t notgive,”
Tania Nix, 58, the daughter of Mr. Childress, said. “Giving that way,
that just got on his heart and he felt like he needed to do it.”
Mr.
Childress grew up poor, surviving with his family on sustenance farming
and by hunting small game. Their house had no electricity until Mr.
Childress was about 7, said his son, Douglas Childress.
An
Air Force veteran, Mr. Childress worked at Lockheed Martin for about 20
years until he retired in 2001, Ms. Nix said. On Friday nights, he
would carry his first wife, who had multiple sclerosis, up the bleachers
at the local high school to watch football games, Douglas Childress
said.
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After
her death from complications of the disease, he found solace in farming
with his son. His wife’s death wasn’t the family’s first major hardship
— a tornado killed Mr. Childress’s father and his middle child, a son,
in the 1970s.
Ms. Nix recalled that
Mr. Childress’s second wife, Martha Jo, had once called to say she
feared that with his history of heart trouble, sitting on a combine in
the Alabama heat might kill him.
Ms. Nix said her father told her: “‘Let me tell you something. If I die on the tractor, I’ll die a happy man.’”
“I told him, ‘OK, I won’t bother you anymore,’” she recalled.
He
also enjoyed cultivating his garden, the products of which — homemade
peanut brittle, fresh strawberries or tomatoes — he handed out freely
around Geraldine, a close-knit community of about 1,000 people that
residents compared to the fictional North Carolina town of Mayberry, the
setting of “The Andy Griffith Show.”
Geraldine,
residents said, has a tradition of neighbors helping one another, as
well as a number of people who need the help. About 19 percent of the
population lives below the poverty line, according to an analysis of U.S. census data from 2020, which is higher than the national average.
In 2010, Mr. Childress walked into Geraldine Drugs and pulled Dr. Walker, the pharmacist, aside.
“‘I have a question,’” she recalled him saying, “‘Do you ever have anyone who can’t pay for their medication?’”
“‘Well, yeah, that happens a good bit,’” she told him.
He
handed her a folded hundred-dollar bill and said, “‘The next time that
happens, I want you to use this,’” she recalled. “‘I want it to be
anonymous. I don’t want to know any details on who you use it on, just
tell them this is a blessing from the Lord,’” he told her.
He
came back a month later with another folded bill, a practice he
continued until late 2022, when he became too ill with chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease to leave his home. At that point, he
decided to confide his secret to one other person, his daughter, Ms.
Nix, who promised to carry on the contributions.
Over
the years, Dr. Walker said, the fund had helped at least two people a
month who didn’t have insurance or whose benefits didn’t cover their
prescription medicine.
Last fall, one of those people was Eli Schlageter, who works part time on a poultry farm run by Mr. Childress’s son, Douglas.
When Dr. Walker told Eli’s mother that money from an anonymous donor would cover the cost of the EpiPen, she cried with relief.
“I
just started squalling,” Ms. Schlageter, a secretary for the principal
at Geraldine High School, said. “We’re a two-income family, but still,
$300 is a lot. Miss Brooke told me: ‘It’s taken care of. No questions
asked.’ I asked how. She never would tell me.”
But then the donor’s identity emerged.
“All
of a sudden it comes out that Mr. Hody did it,” Ms. Schlageter said.
“What he doesn’t know, now that he’s in heaven, is that he helped a kid
that works on a farm that he started. Look at that circle.”
Since The Washington Post
reported Mr. Childress’s largess, Ms. Nix and her family and Dr. Walker
have received calls and messages on social media from people across the
United States wanting to donate.
Last
week, Dr. Walker received a check from someone in Tennessee. On Monday,
a person called from Miami. He told her that unless she needed the
money, he was going to approach his local pharmacy and start his own
Hody Childress account.
As
drug costs have climbed in the last decade, about a quarter of
Americans struggle to pay for prescription medicine, according to a 2019 Kaiser Family Foundation survey. About a third of Americans skip doses, cut pills in half or go without.
Mr.
Childress was a “wonderful example of generosity,” said Frederick
Isasi, head of the health care advocacy group Families U.S.A., and a
reminder “that for many Americans, prescription drugs are out of reach.”
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