I just dont understand America
You're the least panicky because you're in control of the situation, but see that those around you are not. I haven't been out since last weekend, but will be venturing down to the supermarket tomorrow. I shall put on a pair of gloves before entering and when I get home I shall strip off, chuck the lot in the washer and shower. Hair, beards and clothes must be a great trap for airborne infections.In case people don't think of it - wash your hands straight away when you've been out.
Visitors - get them to wash their hands first thing. Impolite? So effin what.
Door handles, keys, phones - wash them.
Shopping trolley and basket handles - you can make a soap solution and bottle it and put it on your hands before using them.
Lift buttons - use your elbow or get someone you don't mind dying to press it for you.
I'm the least panicky git you'll meet, but I don't mind instilling it in others.
Indeed. That goes without saying. The packaged groceries and bottles stay in the carrier bags for 3 days before they're put away and the fruit and veg that won't last three days get washed. No lettuce or salad. packaged frozen gets dunked in mild bleach solution left to drain, dried and put away.I suggest you take your gloves off before getting back in the car so you don't contaminate that. Just decide where your safe/clean zone ends.
Imperial or India -propyl alcohol?I made a batch of chemsan up so a can spray all the handles and gubbins.
I also have around 600ml of IPA at 99.9%, just need some aloe vera gel to mix it with.
We need to get organised. There's loads and loads of goodwill, but it needs organising to be safe and effective. Here in sunny Brittany, we're locked down, which means we're not allowed to visit neighbours and family on pain of fines and imprisonment - let alone pubs- so it's more difficult to share the love, but the most vulnerable are being looked after, by and large.i have packaged lots of beer from keg and put in boxes some kit beer I have done before. Will be taking this to work to help ale drinkers with closing of pubs - I work in school - we all have to come in on Monday.
Breweries around me trying to move sales of their canned/bottled product and offering free deliveries. Some pubs offer take away beer.
I wonder what happen to all the fresh food that closed restaurants/pubs had in stock - it could be given away to food banks and such.
In all honesty in this current climate, I do not think we should be posting data that cannot be verified. ......
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This is not a dig, it’s just my opinion.
Another thing to consider is that this virus appears to affect the old more than the young. So any figures that aren't adjusted for relative population age distribution are misleading.
The easiest approach to this is to say to myself "I'm infected and infectious. How many others am I prepared to infect".When people wont keep a distance make them.
View attachment 23689
Coronavirus: How to behave in an epidemic
The virus is exploiting our very humanity. We are social creatures, but this disease risks turning our natural instincts into a fatal weakness.
Our old routines and habits must be replaced with new customs and practices. We need to adjust to the etiquette of an epidemic.
So how should we behave? How can we be pro-social in a world where a comforting hand or a hug are considered anti-social or even reckless?
In normal times we look to calm anxiety and stress with the human touch. But these are not normal times. The human touch may be the enemy.
Every object we and others come into contact with may be a vector for the virus. The right thing to do is deny this cruel bug the chance to spread.
"This is the time in your lifetime whereby your action will save somebody's life," Prof Stephen Powis, medical director at NHS England, said on Saturday.
None of this comes naturally. It is not easy. We can only do what is possible and we will never know, but the simple act of washing your hands properly may actually save one, two, 50 or 10,000 lives. We should think of that as we sing at the sink.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51991566
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