NOTE: This advice is in no way meant to replace the advice from your veterinarian. PLEASE consult your veterinarian as soon as possible to determine the best care for your orphan kitten.
Determine the age of the kitten to see if it needs to be bottle fed or if it can go directly to soft food:
You can offer soft food but you may still need to bottle feed.
If the kitten is cold, warm it slowly by holding it against your bare skin, allowing it to absorb your body heat. Do not submerge it in water or do any other drastic warming measure. Simply wrapping the kitten up in a blanket or towel is usually not sufficient; as it is not able to generate its own heat. The kitten needs to absorb heat from you. Do not attempt to feed a cold kitten; wait until it warms up.
Make a kitten box -- put a heating pad in a box large enough to accommodate the heating pad plus more room so the kitten can crawl off if it gets too warm. Cover the heating pad with several towels - DO NOT LAY THE KITTEN DIRECTLY ON THE HEATING PAD. Set the temperature to LOW. Change the towels 2-3 times daily.
FEEDING:
KMR (Kitten Milk Replacer) or JUST BORN are two of the best commercial formulas to
feed.
DO NOT GIVE COW'S MILK. If necessary, use the following EMERGENCY RECIPE (for up to 24 hours only).
2/3 cup homogenized whole milk
3 raw egg yolks
1 tablespoon corn oil
1 dropper pediatric liquid vitamins
Warm the formula in a nursing bottle or medicine dropper.
Test it on your wrist to check the temperature. If it feels too warm or too cold on your wrist, it is the same for the kitten.
Place the kitten on its stomach (just as he/she would nurse from its own mother) and let her nurse until she turns her head. Do not squeeze the bottle while nursing - but place a drop on her mouth to get her started. DO NOT PLACE THE KITTEN ON ITS BACK as it can aspirate formula into its lungs and suffocate.
After the kitten is full, it is necessary to stimulate its elimination. Kittens cannot eliminate on their own until they are three weeks old. Take a washcloth or paper towel and gently massage the anal region in a circular or back and forth motion. This is the same kind of activity that a queen (mother cat) would do for her kitten.
FEEDING SCHEDULE:
This is a general guideline. Some kittens eat more or less often. Generally, if a kitten cries, it is either cold or hungry. A contented kitten sleeps quietly.
Age in weeks and feedings per day--
At five weeks, you can begin weaning with baby food or canned cat food mixed with KMR.
WARNING: Never use baby food that contains onion - found to cause a specific type of anemia.
DOs and DON'Ts: