The day a family brings a medically complex child home from the hospital with a new tracheostomy is one of the most anxious days of their lives. It is also one of the most consequential. The first weeks home set the trajectory for the months and years that follow — in terms of caregiver confidence, the child’s clinical stability, and the family’s ability to build a sustainable rhythm around complex care.
This guide walks families through what to realistically expect during pediatric tracheostomy discharge and the first weeks at home. It is written for parents of newborns with trachs, infants transitioning home after a longer NICU or PICU stay, and older children with new trach placement.
Competent pediatric trach discharge does not happen overnight. Hospitals with established pediatric tracheostomy programs begin discharge planning 2–6 weeks before the anticipated go-home date. Core components include:
Two designated primary caregivers complete a structured curriculum covering trach care, suctioning, trach change, emergency response, ventilator operation, and tube feeding if applicable. Most programs require 24–72 hours of hands-on, observed training.
Includes infant/child CPR with trach-specific modifications such as bag-valve-mask with trach adapter, obstruction management, and accidental decannulation response.
A 24–48 hour hospital stay where caregivers provide all care with the medical team available as backup. This serves as the final checkpoint before discharge.
Selection of the home health agency and establishment of an in-home nursing schedule.
Includes ventilator, suction machine, pulse oximeter, feeding pump, supplies, backup power, and oxygen—delivered and verified before arrival home.
Private-duty nursing, equipment, medications, and specialty follow-ups must be approved and scheduled before discharge.
A written plan including go-bag contents, emergency contacts, EMS notification, and evacuation planning where applicable.
Every parent bringing a trach-dependent child home experiences significant anxiety. Research consistently shows clinically significant anxiety and depression rates in parents of children with tracheostomies in the 30–60% range in the first months after discharge. This is not a personal failure — it is a predictable response to taking over medical responsibility for a child who previously had 24/7 hospital staff.
Don't treat it as a surprise or a sign of unfitness.
Not after a crisis.
Both virtually (online communities) and in person when possible.
The trach represents real loss, even when the child is doing well.
As a driver of anxiety and emotional dysregulation, and build strategies to sleep.
To actually rest, not to do housework.
The first week is intense. Expect:
Severe, often worse than what parents experienced in the NICU/PICU
Caregivers often describe "watching for every breath"
If on ventilator or pulse oximeter
Home health nurse, pediatrician, subspecialty follow-ups, early intervention evaluation, DME delivery check-ins
Things that seemed clear in the hospital reveal gaps when applied in a small apartment, a shared room, or a multi-caregiver household
Relief, exhaustion, grief, pride, fear, sometimes within the same hour
The first 4–6 weeks home are typically the period of highest nursing support and highest clinical vigilance. For Medicaid-covered medically complex children with shift nursing orders, this usually means:
For most medically fragile children
For ventilator-dependent and highest-complexity patients
Typically weekly phone check-ins or follow-up visits
At home (or in clinic) between weeks 5–10, depending on the original surgical technique and stoma maturity
Infants with tracheostomies have particular considerations:
Head and neck positioning affect trach tube alignment; tummy time must be adapted
Coordination of oral, tube, or combined feeding; aspiration risk requires careful swallow evaluation
Neck skin folds, drool pooling, and the stoma require twice-daily assessment
Early intervention services should be in place from discharge day one (in Florida, via Early Steps for children 0–3)
Pediatric car seats must be evaluated for trach accessibility and tubing management; car seat tolerance test (keeping oxygen saturation stable in the car seat) is required by most programs before discharge
Most generic pediatric trach discharge guides don't address the state-specific care coordination that actually happens after hospital discharge. For Florida families:
Florida's early intervention program for children 0–3 with developmental delays or established conditions (which includes tracheostomy). Enrollment should begin during hospital stay so services are in place at discharge. Services can include speech/feeding therapy, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and developmental assessment — all typically provided in the home.
Medically complex children often qualify for CMS Plan through Florida Medicaid. The plan includes specialized care coordination through a dedicated CMS care coordinator. Hospital discharge planners typically initiate CMS enrollment.
For children with developmental disabilities meeting specific criteria, the Agency for Persons with Disabilities (APD) iBudget waiver can provide additional home-based supports. Waiting lists exist for many services but medically complex children can be prioritized.
The child's MMA plan (Simply Healthcare, Sunshine Health, Aetna Better Health, United Healthcare, Molina, etc.) authorizes private-duty nursing hours, DME, and specialty care. Plan authorization cycles (often every 30–60 days during the first 6 months) are a regular administrative load that families and home health agencies navigate together.
South Florida families with ventilator- or oxygen-dependent children must register with their county's Special Needs Shelter program before hurricane season (June 1). Each of our seven counties (Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, St. Lucie, Martin, Indian River, Okeechobee) operates a Special Needs Shelter with medical staff. Pre-registration is required — it is not a walk-in service.
When contacted during the pre-discharge period, we coordinate with the hospital case manager, confirm insurance authorization, schedule the first home visit to coincide with discharge day, and establish the initial shift-nursing rhythm. Our pediatric-trained RNs are on site the first day home for most of our pediatric trach admissions.
If your family is preparing to bring a child home from the hospital with a new tracheostomy or tube, Focus Family Care's pediatric home health team can assess your needs and coordinate with your hospital discharge planner. We serve Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, St. Lucie, Martin, Indian River, and Okeechobee counties.
Call Focus Family Care 1 561 677 8909
Most pediatric trach patients also have other diagnoses and other care needs. Families juggle:
Trach care + tube feeding + ventilator + medications + therapies + specialty appointments + developmental follow-up + insurance administration
The sustainable approach — for families who make this work long-term — involves:
Shared across caregivers
Posted where every caregiver can see it
Home health nurse → family → other nurse → specialist
Who handles insurance calls, who coordinates specialist appointments, who handles supply ordering, who is the primary medical point of contact
Monthly in the early months, quarterly later
Practical recommendations:
Ideally with experience in pediatric medical complexity
Don't use every hour to do something productive
For partnered families, scheduled connection time is essential
They will look different but not disappear
Parent to Parent USA, Facebook groups specific to pediatric trach, the Global Tracheostomy Collaborative family forum
Typically before, not during or immediately after
Allows parents to sleep. This is, for most families, the single most important support for long-term stability.
Additional hours beyond baseline coverage allow caregivers to do something other than medical care.
Trained enough to handle basic care so the primary caregivers aren't the only possible adults present.
If one primary caregiver is consistently not sleeping, eating, or functioning, the whole system is at risk.
Typically a pediatrician visit, with parent driver, go-bag, and full supplies
Grocery store, park, pediatrician
Family gatherings, restaurants, travel (with pulmonologist guidance on air travel)
Usually manageable at home
Can cause trach-related morbidity out of proportion to what a non-trach child would experience with the same virus
Requiring suctioning intervention
The go-bag and emergency training exist for this
Most families describe a transition around month 6 — the care becomes less frightening and more routine, even as the complexity remains. The child begins developing, milestones accumulate, and the family builds a stable identity around the care system.
The long arc — including the possibility of eventual decannulation or long-term trach living — unfolds over years.
A: Varies widely. For newborns with tracheostomies placed in the NICU, discharge is typically 2–8 weeks after tracheostomy placement, once caregivers are trained, the child is medically stable, and home infrastructure is in place. For older children with new trachs, 1–4 weeks is typical.
A: For medically complex children, Florida Medicaid MMA plans, private insurance, or CMS Plan typically authorize private-duty nursing hours based on medical necessity. The home health agency (like Focus Family Care) works with the plan to request and justify hours.
A: Not always. Many children with tracheostomies are not ventilator-dependent, and many ventilator-dependent children are eventually weaned. The pulmonologist determines ventilator needs based on lung function, underlying condition, and clinical progress.
A: If shift nursing is authorized, an RN is typically present overnight for the first several nights. If nursing is not yet in place, sleep in shifts with your partner. Use alarms (pulse oximeter, ventilator) as your backup. Do not try to "just power through" without a sleep plan.
A: Stay calm. Replace the tube with a clean trach of the same size per your emergency response training. If you cannot replace it, insert a smaller size trach or a Foley catheter to maintain the airway and call 911.
A: Call 911 for: respiratory distress not resolving with suctioning, inability to replace a dislodged trach, cyanosis, unresponsiveness, or any life-threatening change. Call the pediatrician or pulmonologist for: fever, increased secretions, change in secretion color, feeding changes, or non-emergent clinical concerns.
A: Typically between weeks 5–10 after initial tracheostomy, depending on the surgical technique and stoma maturity. The first change is often performed in the pulmonology clinic, followed by subsequent changes at home after caregiver training.
A: Register with your county's Special Needs Shelter program before June 1. Maintain battery backup for all equipment with enough capacity for 72+ hours. Have a paper copy of medications, DME settings, and emergency contacts. Build a relationship with the local power company for priority restoration during outages.
Focus Family Care partners with South Florida hospital discharge planners to ensure pediatric trach patients transition safely from hospital to home. Serving Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, St. Lucie, Martin, Indian River, and Okeechobee counties. Medicaid MMA, CMS Plan, iBudget, and private insurance accepted.