TESTS AND PROCEDURES

Colostomy: Changing Your Pouch

September 17, 2019

Colostomy: Changing Your Pouch

Closeup of abdomen showing hands removing ostomy pouch.

Your healthcare provider gave you a stoma (new opening for stool to pass from the body) during surgery. Stool starts to pass from the stoma soon after surgery. That means you’ll need to learn how to change your pouch before you go home. You usually need to change your drainable pouch every 5 to 7 days, but you will empty your pouch more often. To change your pouch, follow the steps below. Start by gathering what you’ll need:

  • Plastic bags

  • Soft washcloth

  • Toilet paper

  • New pouch

  • Extra skin protection

  • Scissors (if needed)

  • Clean towel

1. Remove the used pouch

Steps to removing the used pouch are as follows:

  • If you use a drainable pouch, empty it first. Sit on or next to the toilet. Set the clamp aside.

  • Start at the upper edge of the skin barrier. Carefully push the skin away from the skin barrier with one hand. Slowly peel back the skin barrier with the other hand.

  • Peel all the way around the skin barrier until the pouch comes off.

  • Seal the pouch in a plastic bag. Then put it in a second plastic bag. Throw it away in a trash bin. Some people empty the pouch into the toilet first. 

2. Clean around the stoma

Steps to cleaning around the stoma are as follows:

Closeup of abdomen showing hands cleaning around stoma.

  • Wipe any stool off the skin around the stoma with toilet paper.

  • Clean the skin with warm water and a soft washcloth. Wash right up to the edge of the stoma. Pat the skin dry with a clean towel.

  • If needed, put on extra skin protection, such as moisture barrier paste, cream, or powder.

3. Put on the new pouch

Steps to putting on the new pouch are as follows:

Hands placing ostomy pouch over stoma.

  • If you don’t use a pouch with a precut skin barrier, size and cut the opening (no more than one-eighth inch bigger than the stoma) and peel the backing off the skin barrier. Carefully place it over the stoma.

  • If you use a 2-piece pouch, snap the pouch onto the barrier. Start at the bottom and work your fingers around the flange.

  • Press the barrier against your skin with your hand over the barrier and hold it in place for 45 seconds. This molds the barrier to your skin.

  • If you use a drainable pouch, clamp the tail.

  • Wash your hands for at least 20 seconds when you are done. (Hum Happy Birthday twice if you need a timer.) 

Call your healthcare provider or ostomy nurse

Call if:

  • The skin around the stoma is red, weepy, bleeding, or broken.

  • The skin around the stoma itches, burns, stings, or has white spots.

  • The stoma swells, changes color, or bleeds without stopping

  • The stoma changes size, becomes even with, or sinks below the skin, or sticks up more than normal.

Updated:  

September 17, 2019

Reviewed By:  

Jen Lehrer MD,Ronald Karlin MD,L Renee Watson MSN RN