Has this happened to anyone else? How did you treat? Did the chick recover, or not?
This happened when a hen decided to move off the nest with the rest of the chicks, while a late hatching chick was ALMOST done. The chick's navel was all closed up, and it was 95% hatched. Well, I think another chicken came along to eat the shell of this chick. I don't think it was that Mom hen who did this damage.

Yep, that is the chick's skull. I had two options: cull, or treat. For the moment, I chose treat. A thread and needle (sewing needle, as the needles in the suture kits I have are too large for such a tiny patient), time, and chlorhexidine later, and the chick looks less grisly. I had to muster all the hand steadiness I had, since the chick is so small, and the eye was very close to the edges of the wound. Time will tell if the chick's eye was damaged or not.

I was planning on setting eggs at the end of today in this, but for a day or two, the incubator is a ChICU (Chick Intensive Care Unit). The incubator is newly bleached, with a freshly washed dishcloth on the base. I also smeared some triple antibiotic ointment (non painkiller kind, since I know that is bad for chickens) on the chick's wound. I tried to flush out the debris from the wound as best I can, but it was very dirty with shavings.

All things considered, the chick is doing well.
This happened when a hen decided to move off the nest with the rest of the chicks, while a late hatching chick was ALMOST done. The chick's navel was all closed up, and it was 95% hatched. Well, I think another chicken came along to eat the shell of this chick. I don't think it was that Mom hen who did this damage.
Yep, that is the chick's skull. I had two options: cull, or treat. For the moment, I chose treat. A thread and needle (sewing needle, as the needles in the suture kits I have are too large for such a tiny patient), time, and chlorhexidine later, and the chick looks less grisly. I had to muster all the hand steadiness I had, since the chick is so small, and the eye was very close to the edges of the wound. Time will tell if the chick's eye was damaged or not.
I was planning on setting eggs at the end of today in this, but for a day or two, the incubator is a ChICU (Chick Intensive Care Unit). The incubator is newly bleached, with a freshly washed dishcloth on the base. I also smeared some triple antibiotic ointment (non painkiller kind, since I know that is bad for chickens) on the chick's wound. I tried to flush out the debris from the wound as best I can, but it was very dirty with shavings.
All things considered, the chick is doing well.