March/April 2006
Page 9
Keeping Your Pouch Odor-Proof
By Victor Alterescu, RNET
Rinsing a pouch out each time it is emptied is primarily a waste of time. For one thing, it takes longer to empty the pouch and you need more materials around you. You also leave more odor in the room since the pouch is kept open longer. The water, especially if it is warm, may open the pores of the pouch material
and encourage odor permeation. Never use warm water. Also, rinsing can affect the seal of your adhesive. Rinsing a pouch after each emptying serves only an
aesthetic purpose; the interior of the pouch may be clean but it does not serve a functional purpose. Frankly, it does not matter whether the interior of your pouch is clean any more than it matters if the interior of your colon is clean.
The pouch is replacing an organ of storage, the colon and/or the rectum. The most important portion of the pouch that should cleansed very thoroughly is the tip of the drainable pouch. Rinsing the interior can only increase permeation but cleaning the exterior neck will avoid any odor that may be present as a result of having fecal residue on the end of the pouch. Therefore, I often recommend that a person carry an alcohol wipe (individually wrapped in foil) to clean the tip of the pouch. The pouch is emptied, the toilet flushed immediately, and the lower portion of the exterior pouch cleansed with toilet tissue and alcohol.
SOURCE: Quad City, IL Newsletter & S. Brevard FL Ostomy Newsletter: The Re-route on-line, Evansville, IN January 2006, via Inside Out On-line Mar/Apr 06.
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