Tracheostomy Care Procedure

Key Points

  • Routine tracheostomy care lowers bacterial entry into the airway and supports tube patency.
  • Inner cannula care is performed at least every 12-24 hours, with more frequent care for heavy secretions.
  • Dressing should be changed at least once per shift and immediately when wet or soiled.

Equipment

  • Tracheostomy care kit per facility standard
  • Replacement or cleaning supplies for inner cannula type in use
  • Clean tracheostomy dressing materials
  • Personal protective equipment

Procedure Steps

  1. Verify patient status, airway stability, and supplies before starting tracheostomy care.
  2. Prepare sterile or clean-field materials according to policy and identify whether inner cannula is disposable or reusable.
  3. Remove and clean/replace the inner cannula first (this limits contamination of the new dressing after cough stimulation).
  4. Assess stoma and surrounding skin for irritation, moisture, or breakdown.
  5. Clean flange area and peristomal region using kit components and prescribed method.
  6. Apply a clean tracheostomy dressing.
  7. Confirm tube security and reassess airway patency and secretion movement after care.
  8. Document care time, stoma findings, cannula action (cleaned/replaced), and patient response.
  9. Repeat care at least every 12-24 hours and increase frequency when secretion burden is high.

Common Errors

  • Changing dressing before inner cannula care newly applied dressing is rapidly soiled by induced coughing.
  • Delaying routine cannula maintenance increased risk of tracheostomy tube obstruction.
  • Leaving wet or soiled dressing in place higher local bacterial burden and skin breakdown risk.
  • Incomplete post-care reassessment delayed recognition of persistent airway compromise.