Re: Is the sky falling?
Ok here is my helpful hint for the day, in case you are not a lab rat like I was.
I was at the service station yesterday to fill up my truck and my 5 gal cans for the tractors, and NO ONE was taking any kind of precautions while pumping fuel. The virus lives 72 hours on steel or plastic. There are an alarming number of infected people showing no symptoms, and no doubt going about their lives as usual, including handling gas pumps with dirty hands, making it a good idea to protect yourself unless you are lucky enough to get your fuel delivered in bulk. I've seen several posts that gas pumps have been a source of infections
How to use disposable gloves when pumping fuel:
You can use the disposable gloves you may have already in your shop, get at the grocery store or TSC or Harbor Freight.
Think ahead. Your truck, steering wheel, wallet are presumed clean (virus free). If not deal with it. You can clean your cell phone, wallet, credit cards, steering wheel with Chlorox wipes or Rubbing alcohol on a paper towel. Sunshine is a good disinfectant for the outside of big things like trucks.
Have two new gloves laid out on the seat, as well as credit card. Unload your presumed clean fuel cans and remove lids with your clean bare hands. Undo the fuel fill cap on your truck. Put on your gloves and insert credit card with one hand; if you have to touch the buttons on the pump use the other hand. Remove your credit card and put it down on seat with the still "clean hand". Then use both gloved hands as needed to handle the pump, and fill cans and truck with fuel. When finished, put the pump handle back in its slot, punch yes or no to question about receipt, and then remove gloves by grasping at wrist and turning inside out. Dispose in trash immediately. Then using clean hands put all the lids back in place, put cans back in truck, and lid back on fuel fill, climb back in your truck and take off. If you have any, and are OCD, use hand sanitizer once you are back in truck just in case.
There are probably other ways of doing this, but the hard part is to remember what is contaminated by some invisible substance, and act accordingly. If you leave the contaminated gloves on, and get in and then use the steering wheel you are not accomplishing anything.
Used to drive me nuts when students would carefully use gloves to handle some highly toxic chemical in the lab, then walk out the door and punch the buttons on the elevator with the same gloves.