How to Set Up a Hospital Tank for Sick or Injured Fish

rectangular, transparent glass hospital aquarium with sponge filter and plastic plants, illuminated by LED lighting, housing a single orange fish.
  • How to Set Up a Hospital Tank: Full Guide for Emergency Fish Care

    Every aquarist — beginner or expert — eventually faces a sick or injured fish. When this happens, having a properly set up hospital tank (also known as a quarantine or treatment tank) can mean the difference between recovery and loss. Hospital tanks allow you to isolate fish for treatment without risking the health of your main tank and make medication more effective by keeping dosages concentrated.

    This guide walks you through setting up a hospital tank from scratch — including equipment, water quality, treatment protocols, and maintenance. Whether you’re treating Ich, fin rot, parasites, or unexplained lethargy, this setup ensures your fish have the best chance at recovery.

    🏥 What Is a Hospital Tank?

    A hospital tank is a separate aquarium used to isolate fish for observation, treatment, or recovery. It allows you to treat fish with medication without affecting other tank inhabitants or disrupting the biological balance of your display tank.

    • 🐟 Isolate sick or injured fish
    • 💊 Dose medications safely and accurately
    • 🧪 Avoid disrupting your display tank’s beneficial bacteria
    • ⚖️ Control water parameters more precisely

    🧰 Equipment Needed for a Hospital Tank

    • Aquarium (5–20 gallons): Size depends on the fish you keep
    • Heater: Maintain consistent temperature appropriate for species
    • Air-driven sponge filter: Gentle flow, easy to clean, doesn’t remove meds
    • Thermometer: Vital for monitoring temperature during treatment
    • Tank lid: Prevents fish from jumping during stress
    • Light: Optional, but helps monitor fish behavior and condition

    🧪 Setting Up the Hospital Tank

    • 🧼 Rinse tank and sponge filter with dechlorinated water
    • 💧 Fill with fresh, dechlorinated water (match temperature to main tank)
    • 🚫 No substrate or decorations — keep it bare-bottom for easier cleaning
    • 🔁 Seed sponge filter from your display tank (optional, reduces ammonia risk)

    You don’t need a fully cycled hospital tank — daily water changes and ammonia binders like Seachem Prime can keep water safe during treatment.

    💊 Common Medications for Hospital Tanks

    • Ich-X: For Ich and external protozoan parasites
    • Maracyn/Maracyn 2: For bacterial infections and fin rot
    • PraziPro: For flukes and internal parasites
    • API General Cure: Broad-spectrum parasite treatment
    • Melafix (optional): Mild antiseptic for superficial wounds

    Always research medications before use. Some treatments can’t be combined. Follow dosage instructions closely and remove chemical filtration (like carbon) before dosing.

    📋 Hospital Tank Treatment Protocol

    • 🧼 Perform 25–50% water changes daily or as needed
    • 🧪 Monitor ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate every other day
    • 🌡️ Maintain stable temperature and oxygenation
    • 💊 Follow full course of medication even if fish improve
    • 👀 Observe fish behavior, eating habits, and appearance daily

    🚫 What Not to Do

    • 🚫 Don’t use substrate — it traps waste and meds
    • 🚫 Don’t skip water changes — meds don’t remove waste
    • 🚫 Don’t medicate in your main tank unless absolutely necessary
    • 🚫 Don’t mix medications unless verified safe

    🔄 After Treatment: Quarantine or Return?

    Once treatment is finished and the fish is eating, swimming, and behaving normally, give it 5–7 days of observation without medication before reintroducing to the display tank.

    • ✅ Return only if main tank is stable and free of aggression
    • ✅ Acclimate slowly — match temperature and water chemistry
    • ✅ Clean and dry all hospital tank tools before reuse

    🐟 Hospital Tank vs Quarantine Tank

    These terms are often used interchangeably but have distinct purposes:

    • Hospital Tank: Used for treating sick or injured fish
    • Quarantine Tank: Used to observe new fish before introducing to the main tank

    In practice, the same tank can serve both purposes — just clean thoroughly between uses and don’t reuse equipment without sanitizing.

    🧠 What to Read Next

    🎥 Watch DBC Aquatics on YouTube for emergency fish care tips, disease diagnosis videos, and step-by-step hospital tank builds you can replicate at home.

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