If it's a case of cutting back on the coffee budget to ensure one always has an epipen handy, of course you're right.
If it's a case of having to choose between paying the paying the electricity bill and buying an epipen, and you have to guess at the probability of you needing an epipen in the next month vs the certainty of the electric company shutting off your power, with the extra fees and penalties that'll cost to turn it back on, "no matter the cost" is no longer the standard to use.
If it's a case of having to choose between paying the paying the electricity bill and buying an epipen, and you have to guess at the probability of you needing an epipen in the next month vs the certainty of the electric company shutting off your power, with the extra fees and penalties that'll cost to turn it back on, "no matter the cost" is no longer the standard to use.