An American man who was evacuated by the State Department from Wuhan, China — where his father-in-law died of the coronavirus this month — was forced to pay $2,200 for the flight and billed by a San Diego hospital for the six days he and his daughter spent in mandatory quarantine there, following an order from the CDC. Frank Wucinski, who has lived and worked in China for 15 years, said in an interview on Friday that he was aware when he boarded the converted cargo plane in Wuhan with his three-year-old daughter Annabel that he would have to reimburse the United States government for the steep cost of the flight. But after they both tested negative for the virus and were released from the Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego, Wucinski was shocked to receive a bill for the government-mandated stay there.

Finally released from quarantine. Thanks for everything, MCAS Miramar and everyone else! #MCASMiramar #coronavirus pic.twitter.com/ca1atiTjDX — Frank Wucinski (@FWucinski) February 20, 2020

Because he works for a British cultural agency in China, Wucinski has health insurance there that does not cover costs in the U.S. He publicized the bill on a GoFundMe page he set up this month to help tide him over until he regains access to his bank account in China. His bank only issues one card per family, Wucinski said, and he had to leave it with his wife, Li, who stayed behind in Wuhan to care for her father. Li, who is a Chinese citizen, also contracted the virus but has now made a full recovery, Wucinski said. Still, she remains stranded in Wuhan and will not be able to join her husband and daughter until the lockdown to slow the spread of the virus is lifted. After Wucinski drew attention to the bill, Ben Metcalf, a spokesman for the hospital, confirmed to The Intercept on Friday that it was issued, but said that it was sent to Wucinski in error. The hospital initially had trouble reaching Wucinski to let him know that he would not have to pay the bill, but Metcalf said that the hospital will ask the federal government to pay for the quarantine ordered by the CDC. The incident highlighted how the American government’s response to a public health emergency, like trying to contain a potential coronavirus epidemic, could be handicapped by relying on a system built around private hospitals and for-profit health insurance providers. Last month, a man in Miami who returned from a work trip to China feeling sick went to a hospital to be tested for coronavirus. The test came back negative, but his high-deductible health insurance provider told him he would have to pay at least $1,400, the Miami Herald reported, and provide three years of medical records to prove that the flu he got was not related to a preexisting condition. Without producing the records, he would owe $3,270 for getting tested.