UC Davis’ Orphan Kitten Project Helps Vet Students Learn While Saving Lives
2024/01/17

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Through multiple hands-on learning projects, the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine aims to prepare students for future careers as animal medicine practitioners. And one of their initiatives not only gives vet med students hands-on experience but also saves the lives of tiny kittens who might have otherwise perished in the wild. The gives these little ones a chance to find their forever happiness.

As part of the UC Davis’ , the OKP runs as a non-profit foster-based rescue managed by students. And while these students are gaining practice with real-world scenarios that will make them more experienced upon graduation, the OKP is about so much more.

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Simply put, these future veterinarians are saving lives.

The Orphan Kitten Project at UC Davis

Rescuing kittens since 1988, the Orphan Kitten Project takes in abandoned neonatal kittens under the age of four weeks old. Once rescued, kittens undergo a complete exam with project coordinators and students. The little ones are then placed in foster care with students or community volunteers. While in foster care, the babies are hand-raised and bottle-fed, making them well-rounded kitties who will fit in in their new homes.

But before the little ones find their new homes at 10-12 weeks old, they’re vaccinated, FeLV tested, spayed or neutered, and dewormed.

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And rest assured, kittens are never used for invasive research or euthanized because they haven’t been adopted. Kittens simply stay with the OKP until their forever home is found.

Hands-On Learning for Future Vets

Some of the neonatal kittens in the OKP’s care arrive in critical condition, and their care offers vet med students a chance to learn while saving a life. And as we already know, there are always kittens in need of help. In one week alone, the reported the OKP team took in “seven kittens with a variety of ocular and musculoskeletal issues.”

These extreme cases allow students to treat special cases not usually experienced during clinical rotations.

For example, one of the week’s seven kittens had suffered severe leg and hip fractures. And the little one’s treatment “provided training for orthopedic surgery residents and students through the Fracture Program, as well as students in the community surgery rotation.”

Like the Orphan Kitten Project, the and are part of UC Davis’ Access to Care Program. This initiative not only furthers clinical practice for students but also provides veterinary care to underserved communities and pet parents with barriers to care for their fur children.

And because these kittens acquire excellent care through OKP and other UC Davis programs, they’ve got a fighting chance in the world! But care for kittens is expensive.

And as a non-profit program, the Orphan Kitten Project is always in need of help!

To learn more or donate to the cause, and keep up with the kitten cuties saved by up-and-coming veterinary superstars.

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