Setting Up A Hospital Cage For Your Bird

Post-surgery galah

If there is one thing that my recent experiences with my galah Charlie has taught me – it’s the importance of having some sort of hospital set up on standby in case your bird ever becomes critically ill. Even if you are lucky enough to have access to an out of hours vet who can hospitalize a sick bird, having a hospital setup can be extremely useful to help your bird continue to recover once it is well enough to come home.

There are four main things that I think are essential to keep in mind when putting together a hospital cage setup:

Bird Heat Box
My basic heat box setup. It’s simple, warm, clean and stress free.

1) Keep it Simple.

The whole point of a hospital cage is to simplify things for a bird that currently can’t cope with “normal”.

Simple food bowls
Keeping it simple: I keep a collection of shallow dishes, so the bird doesn’t have to climb to eat or drink.

This usually requires a smaller cage or enclosure than what your bird is accustomed to. I find collapsible dog crates or travel cages to be quite handy for this, but I also have a heatbox (reptile enclosure) on hand for more extreme situations.

Low T-perch
I use a range of t-perches. These are store bought. I re-use the perspex sides, screwing in natural perches. The point is to keep perches low, so the bird can’t fall far.

The reason that smaller than normal is better, is because the aim is to make everything easier for the bird. You don’t want them to have to expend a lot of energy to get to food and water, so in theory smaller should bring everything closer together. I keep a range of shallow dishes for use in my hospital setup. I also make my own t-stands or stable low perches. If they fall off a perch, you don’t want them to fall more than an inch or two. If a bird is going to be on the one perch for a long time, I’ll wrap it with vet wrap to make it softer, preventing foot injuries.

Sick galah
Charlie was pretty weak here, sitting on padded perches.

2) Keep it Clean

Meticulous hygiene is something I strive for at the best of times but it is more than essential for a sick bird.

A sick bird is at high risk of contracting some sort of secondary infection, so exposure to droppings, old food or any sort of bacteria really can increase that risk. Not to mention that a lot of illnesses are carried within a sick bird’s droppings, so you should be disposing of any soiled cage linings very carefully and regularly. (I use a water misting spray, to spray any newspaper before carefully rolling it, in order to prevent any contaminates/dust from becoming airborne during cleaning.)

Galah liver failure
When Charlie was getting better, he was still too weak to bathe but he appreciated a dish of damp grass (gone to seed) that he could rub himself with. It also gave him something to do (that didn’t involve removing his stitches). Putting it in a dish made it easy to remove.

Think about how to set up your cage to allow for more frequent than normal removal of any cage linings. This will also help you monitor any changes in droppings as they occur.

Consider using a vet-grade bird-safe disinfectant when cleaning. Your vet should be able to sell you this sort of disinfectant. A good one is able to kill viruses and bacteria. I use F10 (which can also be found on ebay).

F10
The range of F10 disinfectant products that I personally use and recommend. A clean environment isn’t enough – you need to use something that will actually destroy the illness.

3) Keep The Setup Warm

Sick birds will struggle to maintain their own temperature. Providing an external heat source in this situation is often life-saving.

A bird’s resting body temperature (depending on species) usually sits between 38.5C/101.3F and 40C/104F. Their active temperature (depending on species) can usually increase up to 42C/107.6F.

In order to help a bird maintain their temperature, ideally a hospital set up should be maintained at around 25C or 77F.

Heat box temperature
The thermostat switches the heat globe on and off. The temperature drops to around 23C when off but goes up to 26C when on, which is roughly the range I want. Note the digital thermometer is prominent and monitoring the temperature. I don’t simply trust the thermostat (in case the bird recovers enough to start turning the thermostat to a different temperature!!!!)

There are a number of ways of doing this. Most of the easiest methods seem to involve reptile equipment.

This might be a bit extreme/expensive for the average bird person, but I keep a reptile enclosure/hot box on standby. I do this mainly because I have a really old galah with a heart condition. (He’s 65 this year.) He has his bad days and I can honestly say, the hotbox has saved his life more than once.

Heat lamp
My elderly galah Cocky Boy needs a heat lamp available 24/7. He has a special “disabled” setup for everyday use but a hospital setup is essential for a bird of his age as he does occasionally need it.

The obvious advantage of using something like a hotbox is that it is designed to hold a constant temperature, despite having vents that still allow airflow. The one that I use has a thermostat that switches a heat generating light globe on and off. The globe stays on long enough to maintain the temperature but switches off to prevent overheating.

An alternative is simply to use a smaller cage or a travel cage and partially cover it to help trap heat. If you do this, covering the cage is not enough on its own you need to use an external heat lamp in order to provide the heat.

bird heat lamp
The “Exo Terra Ceramic Glow Lamp” with a 60W ceramic globe. This is the external heat lamp that I use. The white part glows slightly in the dark. Handy to help prevent you accidentally brushing it and burning yourself in the dark!

If you’re going to use something like this it is important to know what sort of globe the heatbox thermostat is calibrated to or temperature that the lamp is designed for. My box (like most) is designed to use a 60W red globe. It maintains the exact temperature that the thermostat is set to, if I use that globe. That’s great, except I don’t like using that sort of globe.

Red heat globes are actually the type of globe that many avian vets and bird specialists use. Even so, I can’t in good conscience recommend them myself. I don’t like them for a couple of reasons.

Heat globes
These are the globes I’m talking about and the black mesh thing is a cage I screw over the globe in the beatbox in order to prevent a bird from burning itself.

Firstly, I find the light disturbs the birds at night, whereas the ceramic globes (that don’t emit light) don’t. I’ve learned to take note when a bird is distressed by something and I’ve seen more than one bird disturbed by a red globe. Also after you’ve seen a glass heat globe shatter/explode, you’re unlikely to ever want to put one above your bird. You can buy shatterproof globes but their shatterproof coating is usually made of Teflon. (Teflon and birds don’t mix well.)

I’m also not confident in saying that red globes are 100% safe for long-term use. I’ve read a mixture of studies that say red globes are perfectly safe and preferred; others say they can cause cataracts/damage eyesight. As a general rule, when studies seem to produce such conflicting results I tend to assume it’s something we’ll know more about in 5 years time and so I’m wary about recommending them until that time.  [UPDATE: 2025.  We know these red globes are dangerous.  This has now been proven in multiple ways.  In the present day, there are still avian vets that use them in their hospital BUT the ones that know what they are doing and have updated their knowledge do NOT use them.]

heat globe cover
This is how the black powder coated cage fits over the globe. Unlike the globe, it doesn’t get too hot to touch.

I use ceramic globes. On the bright side, they’re not known for shattering but they also have some significant disadvantages. They don’t emit light, so you can’t tell if they’re on by looking at them and you can get a really nasty burn if you touch a hot one. They also tend to emit more heat than the average glass heat globe, which means you’ve got to be careful what you put them in – you might need a lower wattage to be safe. I use a 50W in my heat box, but a 60W in my heat lamp (which is designed for an 80W red globe). I actually check the temperature with a reptile enclosure thermometer. Even using a 50W globe in the heatbox, I find the temperature sits at approximately 5C above what the thermostat is set to. It does pay to test these things before you need to put a live animal in there.

4) Make It A Stress Free Environment.

Keep your hospital setup away from the television, noisy children and other pets. A sick bird needs a quiet calm environment to rest. Not a space where someone keeps prodding it to see if it’s dead yet?

It’s very easy to overlook this when you’re catering to your desire to have the bird somewhere near you, where you can keep a close eye on it. Us humans tend to be noisy creatures, so

Sick galah
Put your bird hospital in a quiet spot.

Finally – if you’re following my galah Charlie’s story.  I’m pleased to say he has recovered from his surgery and is back in his own cage.  His prognosis isn’t great.  The diagnosis has been confirmed as very advanced fatty liver disease.  For the moment he is stable and responding very well to medication but his condition should gradually advance as his biopsy results show that it has already advanced too far to be reversed.  So it’s one day at a time, doing everything that can be done to help such a sick liver.   While he has a good quality of life, there is still hope for him.

Galah post-surgery
Having noticed that Charlie had mastered the art of changing the thermostat settings by himself, I decided Charlie was ready to return to his own cage, where he has an external heat lamp that he can sit next to when he feels the need.

This post was originally written by Mel Vincent for Birdtricks.com and published on September 18 2014.

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Mel Vincent

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