Emptying and Cleaning Your Urinary Catheter Bag
You have an indwelling urinary catheter. This drains urine from your bladder into a bag. The bag can be one that is used at the bedside. Or it can be a smaller bag that is strapped to the leg. Follow the numbered steps below to empty and clean a urinary bag.

1. Drain the Bag
Wash your hands well with soap and water to prevent infecting the urinary catheter and bag.
If the short drainage tube is inserted into a pocket on the bag, take the drainage tube out of the pocket.
Hold the drainage tube over a toilet or measuring container. Open the valve.
Don’t touch the tip of the valve or let it touch the toilet or container.
Wash your hands again.

2. Clean the Drainage Tube
When the bag is empty, clean the tip of the drainage valve with an alcohol wipe.
Close the valve.
Reinsert the drainage tube into the pocket, if there is one.
3. Clean Your Skin
Wash your hands well before and after cleaning your skin.
If you have a catheter (such as a Foley ) that enters through the urethra, clean the urethral area with soap and water 1 time(s) daily as you were taught by your healthcare provider. You should also clean after every bowel movement to prevent infection.
Avoid pulling on the tubing when cleaning so you don’t injure the urethra.
Don’t apply antibiotic ointment or any other antibacterial product to the urethra.
Don’t use lubricant on the urethra.
Don’t apply powder to the genital area or to the tubing.
If you have a suprapubic catheter (one that was surgically placed into the bladder through the lower abdomen), your healthcare provider will tell you how to clean your skin around the catheter.
4. Check and Clean the Catheter Tubing 
Check the tubing. If there are kinks, cracks, clogs, or you can’t see into the tubing, you’ll need to change to new tubing as you were shown by your healthcare provider.
If the current tubing can still be used, wash it with soap and water. Always wash the tubing in the direction away from your body. Avoid pulling on the tubing.
Dry the tubing with a clean washcloth or paper towel.
5. Clean the Drainage Bag
When to Call Your Doctor
Call your doctor right away if you have any of the following:
Little or no urine flowing into the bag
Urine leaking where the catheter enters the body
Pain, burning, or redness of the area where the catheter enters the body
Bloody urine (a trace of blood is normal)
Cloudy or foul-smelling urine, or sandlike grains in your urine
Pain in your lower back or lower abdomen
Your catheter falls out
Fever of 100.4°F or higher, or shaking chills