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Questions involving Trach Care!!! HELP!!! CLEAN TECHNIQUE? WHAT?Rating: (votes: 0) ![]() I would use a new catheter each time I suction, I've been taught, and teach never to reuse a suction catheter. It's a clean procedure rather than sterile but infection prevention would be a priority.Wouldn't use a Yaunker to suction a trach either.This is one of the guides that we used, it's taken from the Royal Marsden's Clinical Nursing Procedureshttp://www.nursingtimes.net/tracheos...980627.article Comment:
I graduated recently, and was taught STERILE technique. I have seen people who have been Nurses or RTs for a long time use clean technique. I would just do what you were taught.
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In the hospital setting I absolutely always use a new sterile catheter each time. Since this is a home setting, though, I wonder if this is the same as people reusing straight catheters at home? Since it is their own home/own germs, etc. it may be acceptable? Good question, something I never thought of before.
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Home care is unique in the fact that that your clients probably gets limited supplies. Doesn't make it right but that's how home care rolls. I've never heard or would put a yaunker into a trach....interesting. As for sterile technique, not necessary in the home as the client is living colonized w his own bacterias....in the hospital he would need sterile teqhnique so as to not introduce new bacteria into his flora. Ah what they don't teach you in school.ETA: Just an FYI I am not condoning using clean vs sterile technique and in the majority of home cases i've worked i've been able to use a new sxn cath w each sxn, but I have been to homes where caths have been reused in a clean technique and the rate of infection was the same as in sterile technique homes.
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I use a new catheter each time. That being said I keep in mind that the only place you can guarantee a completely sterile environment is in an operating room. So be as clean as possible and don't reuse stuff on these pts
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I used to work on a 30 bed trach floor....all trachs all the time :-) Clean technique is used in the home setting and caregivers will use clean technique in the hospital setting as well (it is not reasonable to expect a caregiver to use a new suction catheter every time as you might go through 100+ suction catheters a day...) Nurses should use sterile technique in the hospital setting. If you have a patient with tracheitis that is spewing secretions, it is acceptable to put a yankeur up to the outside of the trach to suction out thick secretions and then use sterile technique with a suction catheter to suction out the rest of the trach.
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Home setting is different - but if a suction catheter has been used in the mouth, it should not be reused in the trach.Suctioning a trach should be as clean as possible - sterile in the hospital. And Yankauer caths are for the mouth.
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I was taught it should be sterile technique but like someone else posted homecare could be totally different and that's something I don't know much about.
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Chiming in.....I was taught you could go from trach to mouth in terms of suctioning, just not the other way around (mouth to trach).
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I work peds home care and we MUST reuse the same cath over and over D/T limited supplies, but they are wiped down with alcohol prep between sx. also the yankauer can be used around the trach for coughed up secretions, but not in it. I have had emergency situations were vomiting has happened and i have used a trach cath back and forth because no time to change to yank. But generally that does not happen often.
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Clean technique in the home, but you try to be as clean as possible and don't go from the mouth back to the trach with the same catheter. Sterile technique in the hospital. Of course, if the doctor orders sterile technique in the home you follow the doctor's orders. I have seen sterile technique ordered in the home.
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You should follow your facility's or home health agency's policy and procedure and provider's orders on tracheal suctioning. For one home health agency (in which I staff part-time), clean technique is used for tracheal suctioning in the client's home. This particular client has limited monthly supplies due to "bare bones" Medicaid reimbursements. On the other hand, when I am in the hospital on the pediatric floor (for my clinical groups), we always use strict sterile technique while suctioning pediatric patients with tracheostomies. We also use stict sterile technique in tracheal suctioning in a pediatric long-term care facility in which I also accompany students for their clinical experiences.
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