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Medication Guide ยท Updated June 20, 2026

Maple Hospital Roblox medication guide and treatment lookup.

Find the right treatment for any patient condition in Maple Hospital Roblox. This is a searchable database of every in-game medication, from the antiemetic and analgesic to the defibrillator. Type a symptom or a drug name, filter by category, and open any row for the administration steps and the common mistakes that fail patients.

Key takeaways

  • Always clear the diagnostic step on the chart before you administer, or the medication counts as wrong.
  • Oral medications and the antiemetic come from the nursing station cabinet; emergency items sit on the crash cart.
  • Emergency treatments such as the defibrillator pay the most XP, but routine ward dosing is the steadier source.

Showing 15 of 15 medications. Tap any row for the full administration steps.

Antiemetics in Maple Hospital

The antiemetic is the one medication new players reach for too early. It treats nausea and vomiting, and it shows up on ward patients, post-surgery recovery, and a handful of quest cases. The game splits it into two forms. The oral tablet handles moderate nausea, roughly level 2 on the chart, where the patient is queasy but not actively vomiting. The IV push is the right call for severe nausea, active vomiting, or any patient who has just come out of surgery and is still under the post-op flag.

The trap is mild nausea. A level-1 patient with no vomiting does not meet the in-game threshold, so an antiemetic there burns a charge for zero XP and leaves the case open. The second trap is blood pressure. Never run the IV push on a patient whose systolic sits below 90, because the game treats that as destabilizing and resets the case. If you want the full dosing decision tree with contraindications, the dedicated Maple Hospital antiemetic dosage guide walks through every input. This page keeps the antiemetic in context next to every other drug so you can compare it against the analgesic, the antibiotic, and the rest of the cabinet.

Most common medications list

Across a normal ward shift you will reach for the same dozen items again and again. The antiemetic and the analgesic cover the bulk of routine cases. The analgesic, your pain relief, works off the pain scale on the chart: the oral tablet for pain 2 to 3, and the IV analgesic for pain 4 and up or any fracture patient before splinting. Antibiotics handle infection and fever, but only after a blood panel or temperature check makes the infection flag appear.

Wound work runs through three items in order: the antiseptic wash to clear the red flash, the burn ointment on burns after they are cooled at the sink, and the bandage to close the wound. Hydration and pre-surgery prep use the IV drip, which needs the line primed before the cannula goes in. Breathing cases use the oxygen mask for low SpO2 and the nebulizer for asthma and wheezing. Reserve the crash cart, the defibrillator and epinephrine, for true emergencies: cardiac arrest, flatlines, and anaphylaxis. The searchable table above lists each one with the exact department, where to find it, and its XP band, so you can sort the whole cabinet by what a patient in front of you actually needs.

How to administer medications step by step

Every medication in Maple Hospital follows the same four-beat rhythm, and learning it once speeds up every case afterward.

  1. 1. Read the chart. Open the patient chart and find the condition flag. The flag tells you which medication is correct and which diagnostic step has to come first.
  2. 2. Clear the prerequisite. Run the blood panel, take the temperature, prime the IV line, or cool the burn, whichever the chart requires. Skipping this is the single biggest cause of a wrong-medication error.
  3. 3. Pick up the right item. Collect the medication from the correct cabinet or cart. The table above lists the exact location for each drug so you are not hunting mid-case.
  4. 4. Administer and confirm. Interact with the patient marker, then watch the on-screen reading move toward green. Many cases need a recheck step, such as re-reading the thermometer after an antipyretic, before the case closes and pays out.

For IV medications the order inside step three matters: prime the line, insert the cannula, then push the drug. For emergencies the order is the whole game, so on an anaphylaxis crash the epinephrine goes first, before oxygen or fluids. When you are not sure, search the condition in the finder at the top of the page and read the How to Use panel before you touch the patient.

Medication mistakes that fail patients

Most failed cases come from a short list of avoidable errors. Dosing too early is the worst offender: giving an antibiotic before the infection flag, suturing before the antiseptic clears, or pushing an IV drug without priming the line all register as wrong and lock the next step. Treating out of order ends critical cases fast. Let SpO2 fall to the red line before you fit the oxygen mask and a respiratory case fails instantly. Treat the airway before epinephrine on anaphylaxis and stability drops past the point you can recover.

Two quieter mistakes cost XP without obvious failure. The first is over-dosing, common on the anticoagulant, where too large a dose pushes the bleeding marker into the red. The second is skipping a recheck, common on antipyretics, where the case stays open because you never confirmed the fever marker was falling. Run the finder above whenever a chart flag is unfamiliar, read the Common Mistakes panel for that drug, and you will clear the cabinet without resets.

Frequently asked questions

What is an antiemetic in Maple Hospital Roblox?

An antiemetic is the medication used to treat nausea and vomiting in Maple Hospital Roblox. It comes as an oral tablet for moderate nausea and an IV push for severe nausea, active vomiting, or post-surgery patients. You collect it from the nursing station medication cabinet. For the full dosing decision tree, see the dedicated antiemetic guide linked from this page.

How do you use medication in Maple Hospital Roblox?

Read the patient chart first so the condition flag appears, pick up the matching medication from the correct cabinet or cart, walk to the patient bay, and interact with the patient marker to administer it. Most medications have a prerequisite step, such as a blood panel before an antibiotic or a primed IV line before an IV push. Administering before the flag shows counts as a wrong medication and locks the next step.

Where do you find medications in Maple Hospital?

Most oral medications and the antiemetic live in the nursing station medication cabinet. Wound supplies, ointment, and bandages are on the ER supply trolley. IV poles line the ward, oxygen runs off the wall regulator at each bay, and emergency items such as the defibrillator and epinephrine sit on the crash cart at the ER and each ICU bay.

What is the most common medication mistake in Maple Hospital?

Giving a medication before the condition flag shows on the chart. An antibiotic before the infection flag, a suture before the antiseptic clears, or an IV push without a primed line all count as errors that lock the next step and cost the step XP. Always complete the diagnostic step the chart asks for first.

Which medication gives the most XP in Maple Hospital Roblox?

Emergency treatments pay the most. A correct defibrillator cycle during a Code Red awards roughly 15 to 22 XP, and epinephrine on an anaphylaxis case pays 12 to 18 XP. Routine medications such as an antiemetic or antipyretic pay 7 to 14 XP each, but they appear far more often, so steady ward dosing is the more reliable XP source.

Can you give the wrong medication in Maple Hospital?

Yes. Picking a medication that does not match the chart flag, or administering in the wrong order, registers as a wrong medication. It does not award XP, it can reset the case step, and on critical cases such as anaphylaxis or cardiac arrest it can let patient stability fall past the recoverable point. Use the search tool above to confirm the right drug for each condition before you administer.

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Written by

Jim Liu ยท About this site

Independent Maple Hospital guide site. Medication behavior documented from hands-on gameplay sessions, June 2026. Not affiliated with Marizma Games or Gamefam. In-game item names and XP bands can shift between updates, so verify against your current session.

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