Toileting

Toileting

In health care, toileting is the act of assisting a dependent patient with his/her elimination needs. Depending on a patient's condition, his/her toileting needs may need to be met differently. This could be by assisting the patient to walk to a bathroom, to a portable commode, onto a bedpan, or to provide a male patient with a urinal. A more dependent or incontinent patient may have his/her toileting needs met solely through the use of diapers.

Methods of toileting

The methods used for toileting patients vary for each patient, depending on the needs of the particular patient.

Ambulatory assistance

Some patients can walk with assistance from another person, usually a health care worker. Aside from the need for this help, they are capable of meeting their own elimination needs.

Bedpan

Patients who cannot get out of bed easily but are continent are able to request a bedpan. The bedpan is placed underneath the patient, who can urinate or defecate as needed.

Some patients are able to place their own bedpans under themselves, and assistance is required only to empty them after the fact.

Urinal

Male patients are often able to use urinals for urination. Urinals can be placed at the side of the bed for self-use by patients. Some patients require assistance from a member of nursing staff in order to have the urinal placed in the correct place.

Diaper

Incontinent patient often wear diapers to prevent their pants from being messed up by their elimination. Diapers must be checked and changed freqently.

Catheter

Catheters are tubes that drain urine straight out of the bladder. A Foley catheter is inserted into the bladder. An external catheter is attached to the penis of a male patient. While Foley catheters can only be applied to a nurse or physician, external catheters can be attached to patients by a certified nurse assistant.

Collection, measurement, and analysis

Input and output

Input and output (I & O) is the measure of food and fluids that enter and exit the body. Certain patients with the need are placed on I & O, and if so, their urinary output is measured.

With self-toileting patients on I & O, or those who are assisted to a regular toilet or portable commode, a receptacle is placed in the toilet bowl that catches all urine that is put out by the patient. This, in turn, is measured by the nursing staff and recorded prior to its disposal.

If the patient is using a bedpan, the nursing staff member who empties the bedpan measures the urine prior to its disposal.

Urinals usually contain measuring lines providing easy measurement. Urinals are also useful for measuring urine from other sources.

Catheters, which are frequently used when it is necessary to measure a patient's output, often have measuring lines on their bags, but these are not considered to be accurate because the bag is floppy. Urine that is emptied from a catheter must be placed in a level container (such as a urinal) in order to be measured.

Bowel movement

In many patients, bowel movement is also measured. In some facilities, it is the standard procedure to record bowel movement of all patients.

Bowel movement is generally measured by its size (small, medium, or large), given the amount. Additionally, if a patient has diarrhea, this is recorded.

A patient who has not had a bowel movement in several days is often given laxatives. Patients who independently toilet themselves often do not report bowel movements, thereby leading them to get laxatives when they do not need them.

ources

*Foundations of Caregiving, published by the American Red Cross


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