A young girl bitten by a snake at summer camp was left with an elephant-size medical bill of $142,938, her parents say.

Oakley Yoder was 9 last July when a snake bit a toe on her right foot while she was at camp in Shawnee National Forest in Jackson Falls, Ill., according to NPR.

“I was really scared. I thought that I could either get paralyzed or could actually die,” Oakley, now 10, told NPR.

Camp counselors, suspecting the bite was from a venomous copperhead, gave her a piggyback until they reached first responders, who recommended taking her to a hospital by air ambulance, according to the report.

Her frantic parents, Josh Perry and Shelli Yoder, were already waiting at Indiana’s St. Vincent Evansville hospital when she arrived after the 80-mile flight.

“It was a major comfort for me to realize, OK, we’re getting the best care possible,” her dad, a health care ethics professor at Indiana University, Bloomington, told the outlet.

Their relief at their daughter leaving the hospital after less than 24 hours soon turned to horror when the bills started arriving — totaling $142,938, according to the documents shared with NPR.

It included $55,577.64 for the air ambulance — and an even more staggering $67,957 for four vials of antivenin needed to protect her from the bite.

The bill shows the hospital charged $16,989.25 for each unit of CroFab, the only drug available to treat venomous bites from pit vipers at the time — more than five times higher than the average list price of $3,198.

“It’s a profitable drug and everyone wants a piece of it,” said Dr. Leslie Boyer, founding director of research center the VIPER Institute.

The family’s health insurance, IU Health Plans, negotiated down the bills and paid $107,863.33, with secondary insurance from the summer camp covering $7,286.34 in additional costs.

The family ultimately did not have to pay any out-of-pocket costs for her additional emergency care, according to NPR.

“I know that in this country, in this system, that is a miracle,” admitted relieved dad Perry, who teaches a course on the ethics of the health care industry.

Oakley’s foot is now healed — and she intends to return to the camp this summer, she told NPR.