Jasmine, Hi and welcome to our group. Glad you found it. Many kittens test positive for FeLV early on, only to test negative later on. The mother's antibodies still remaining in kitty's system is what causes this. About 40% of cats who actually contract FeLV throw off the virus. Chances are this is what happened with your kitten, thank goodness. Most of us here believe that the FeLV virus is very hard to pass, and therefore mix positives and negatives. I did for four years and none of the other kitties contracted the virus. Because your kitten is now negative, you can probably safely assume your others will be ok. If you are worried about it, get another test just to double check, and then you should be good to let him out! Keep us updated!
:) Wendy Dallas, Tx ____________________________________________________________________________________ Want to start your own business? Learn how on Yahoo! Small Business. http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/r-index

