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New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

  • 1.  New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 22 days ago

    New data analysis shows that neonatal kittens are the pets least likely to survive in a shelter - but with a short period of supportive care, they get adopted quickly. A short period of supportive care for neonatal kittens who come into shelters, ideally in a foster home, gives them the chance to make this transition from at-risk to adopted!

    Take a look at our new blog for more: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Thanks and have a great weekend!!

    Best Friends Animal Society remove preview
    Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable
    New data analysis comes with a clear call to action: Neonatal kittens have the highest mortality of all shelter populations - but that once they reach eight weeks old, they become among the most adoptable.
    View this on Best Friends Animal Society >


    #CommunityCatManagement
    #DataandTechnology
    #FosterPrograms

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    Arin Greenwood
    Senior Strategist, Network and Advocacy Communications
    Best Friends Animal Society
    St Petersburg, FL
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  • 2.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 21 days ago

    Hi.
    Are your kittens being adopted pre-spay/neuter surgeries? I have wonderful bottle babies, but at 8 weeks they are too small to be fixed. Therefore I might be able to neuter, and put up for adoption at 10 weeks. They will still be awesome cats, but larger than what some might expect when wanting to adopt a kitten.

    thank you. 



    ------------------------------
    Rebecca McCathern
    Founder & Managing Director
    Helena's Community Cats of SOWEGA
    GA
    ------------------------------



  • 3.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 20 days ago

    Such a great question as I struggle with this as well.  Kittens are adorable at that "kitten stage" but too young to adopt.  At 2 lbs they can be spay/neutered, but I still struggle with 2 lbs.  The issue I find is letting them be adopted before spay/neutered is a risk of them not getting fixed.  I'm working on a follow up plan for kittens adopting  to good homes before spay/neuter.  I'm going to follow up with a schedule date, and pick up the kitten for the appointment.  I know it's a step many may not be able to do, but I'm going to try it. 

    Following to see what everyone is doing!



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    Kimberlee Jones
    Co-Founder
    Sam's TRN, Inc
    GA
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  • 4.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 20 days ago
    Maybe start a Foster to Adopt Program. You still have control of when the kitten gets fixed. I would caution with adopting before spay/neuter. 
    Once adopted, it could be difficult if not impossible to facilitate getting the kitten spayed or neutered. 
    We are also in Georgia. We do not adopt out until they are fixed at 2 pounds. 

    Beverly Paladinetti
    Philanthropy Director
    Purrfect Peaches Cat Rescue
    www.purrfectpeaches.org
    Do all the good you can each day.





    On Sun, Jun 14, 2026, 9:57 AM Kimberlee Jones via Maddie's Pet Forum <Mail@maddiesfund.org> wrote:
    Such a great question as I struggle with this as well. Kittens are adorable at that "kitten stage" but too young to adopt. At 2 lbs they can be...
    Maddie's Pet Forum

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    Re: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable
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    Jun 14, 2026 6:55 AM
    Kimberlee Jones

    Such a great question as I struggle with this as well.  Kittens are adorable at that "kitten stage" but too young to adopt.  At 2 lbs they can be spay/neutered, but I still struggle with 2 lbs.  The issue I find is letting them be adopted before spay/neutered is a risk of them not getting fixed.  I'm working on a follow up plan for kittens adopting  to good homes before spay/neuter.  I'm going to follow up with a schedule date, and pick up the kitten for the appointment.  I know it's a step many may not be able to do, but I'm going to try it. 

    Following to see what everyone is doing!



    ------------------------------
    Kimberlee Jones
    Co-Founder
    Sam's TRN, Inc
    GA
    ------------------------------
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  • 5.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    I'm such a big fan of pre-adoption! My previous shelter pre-adopted out the vast majority of our neonates from foster. We made them available at 6 weeks and scheduled pickup based on their anticipated surgery date. We emphasized with adopters that the surgery date was estimated and that a number of factors could delay surgery. We had protocols for contacting adopters: ehen to reach out, what to say, what their options were, etc. when surgery was delayed.  That made it relatively smooth. Most adopters waited, some picked another kitten. 

    I encourage you to question whether you're delaying surgery based on legitimate increased risk or your own perception of risk. I absolutely understand the feeling that these surgeries are risky. The kittens are so tiny! But the data clearly show that these are safe surgeries when kittens are healthy and age-appropriate protocols are followed. I think this is one of those things it's important to challenge ourselves on, because delaying surgeries inevitably means fewer kittens being able to come through your program. So there's a very real risk of waiting. 

    I'd be happy to chat more about my shelter's pre-adoption program or how we made decisions around risk if it would be helpful. 



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    Karen Green, CAWA
    Ask Karen Green
    askkarengreen@gmail.com
    askkarengreen.com
    ------------------------------



  • 6.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    Just to clarify, for us, pre-adoption meant basically all of the adoption process had been completed except that the kitten was still legally and physically in our possession. 

    Karen 



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    Karen Green

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  • 7.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    I love this, Karen!

    FYI: The UC-Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program recommends "spaying/neutering shelter kittens is as early as 6 weeks old or at a robust weight of 1.5 pounds." Of course, not all veterinarians are comfortable with this-but that's likely to change over time, as the veterinary community recognizes the high value/low risk.

    https://www.sheltermedicine.com/library/resources/recommendation-spay-neuter-healthy-kittens-at-6-weeks-1-5-pounds



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    Peter Wolf
    Best Friends Animal Society
    Phoenix AZ
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  • 8.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    I'm so glad you added that point and the link! At CAT, we had started altering at 6 weeks and a "healthy, robust" 1.5lbs, but there was still reluctance among staff, volunteers, and fosters. Not an overnight change, that's for sure!

    Karen



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    Karen Green, CAWA
    Ask Karen Green
    askkarengreen@gmail.com
    http://askkarengreen.com
    ------------------------------



  • 9.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    At our rescue, kittens fly off the shelves whether they are 8 weeks or 16 weeks, but we have the option of an onsite location where there is a lot of visibility. We also do pre-adoptions while kittens are still in foster care. People meet the kittens in foster homes before they are neutered, and we start the adoption process and reserve the kittens for them.  Once spay/neuter has been completed the adopter can pick the kittens up from the rescue or from the foster home. We encourage our foster homes to market their kittens on social media and invite people over to meet them for socialization and adopting.  It's fun for foster homes because they get to meet the people adopting, they get updates on the kittens as they grow up, and the kittens get to go from a home to a home - less stressful.

    To increase visibility, we do stories on social media about certain litters and kittens. We've done public adoption events at various locations. We've taken kittens on our local news channel to get the public more aware of our presence in the community. We host a kitten shower every year.  Eventually, we aim to create a more robust foster kitten pre-adoption program through marketing all available kittens (not yet spayed/neutered) on our website and developing a simpler adoption process that our foster homes can learn to do. Check out Cat Adoption Team's model (part of their Fostering for Rockstars program). It works really well for kittens. We are working towards this kind of system.



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    Michelle Flowers
    Foster Program Manager
    Seattle Area Feline Rescue
    UW-AAB
    ------------------------------



  • 10.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    Michelle, CAT was my shelter! And thank you for bringing up Fostering 4 Rock Stars. That website has much more information about our foster program than my brain does. 😉

    Fostering 4 Rock Stars Resources

    Direct Link to Pre-Adoption SOPs

    Karen



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    Karen Green, CAWA
    Ask Karen Green
    askkarengreen@gmail.com
    http://askkarengreen.com
    ------------------------------



  • 11.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    Thank you for these links Karen! Super helpful as we are building our programs. 
    cheers,

    Rebecca 



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    Rebecca McCathern
    Founder & Managing Director
    Helena's Community Cats of SOWEGA
    GA
    ------------------------------



  • 12.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    Happy to help! 

    CAT (Cat Adoption Team) was able to run Fostering 4 Rock Stars as an apprenticeship and later through Maddie's University, all thanks to Maddie's Fund. ❤️The courses are no longer available, but many of the materials are still accessible. 

    Good luck and let me know if I can help!

    Karen



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    Karen Green, CAWA
    Ask Karen Green
    http://askkarengreen.com
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  • 13.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 18 days ago

    Thank you for providing those links, Karen! I did the training with F4R almost 2 years ago now. It has made a big difference at our rescue for our kittens. All the resources CAT provided made it easy to adapt it to our rescue. We are a small org with a few staff, so implementing it is taking time, but one step at a time!



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    Michelle Flowers
    Foster Program Manager
    Seattle Area Feline Rescue
    UW-AAB
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  • 14.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    Hi, Rebecca.

    The UC-Davis Koret Shelter Medicine Program recommends "spaying/neutering shelter kittens is as early as 6 weeks old or at a robust weight of 1.5 pounds." Of course, not all veterinarians are comfortable with this-but that's likely to change over time, as the veterinary community recognizes the high value/low risk.

    https://www.sheltermedicine.com/library/resources/recommendation-spay-neuter-healthy-kittens-at-6-weeks-1-5-pounds



    ------------------------------
    Peter Wolf
    Best Friends Animal Society
    Phoenix AZ
    ------------------------------



  • 15.  RE: New blog: Kittens Are the Most Vulnerable Shelter Population, but Among the Most Adoptable

    Posted 19 days ago

    Hi Peter,

    When I lived in California, the kittens I adopted were 8 weeks and already fixed. I am in Georgia now, and the best I can get is 2.5 lbs which is working out to be 9-10 weeks for the kittens in my rescue. I do hope things change here, and I'll push for change, because our cat population is growing exponentially by the day. Thank you for the article.

    best,

    Rebecca 



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    Rebecca McCathern
    Founder & Managing Director
    Helena's Community Cats of SOWEGA
    GA
    ------------------------------