Coronavirus COVID-19 *Global Health Emergency* #14

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  • #641
Top travel firms are relaxing their strict booking conditions on luxury breaks as reservations continue to nose-dive amid fears over the coronavirus outbreak.

Cruise holiday giant Royal Caribbean has decided to allow guests to cancel their stays up to two days before their ships are due to set sail and receive a full credit, which they can use to book another holiday by the end of next year.

Luxury holiday firm Kuoni has also tweaked its booking conditions, allowing customers for exclusive destinations including the Maldives, Bali and Sri Lanka to switch their trip dates up to seven days before departure.

Top travel firms relax strict booking policies to tempt more customers on luxury breaks | Daily Mail Online
 
  • #642
  • #643
  • #644
Maybe open them outside. Throw away right away. Then wash your hands well and wash the item if possible? I started doing this a long while back because the Amazon boxes are alway really dirty.
Probably a good idea.
"According to the WHO, coronaviruses may survive on surfaces for just a few hours or several days, although many factors will influence this, including surface material and weather.

That’s why personal preventive steps like frequently washing hands with soap and water or an alcohol-based hand sanitizer, and wiping down often-touched surfaces with disinfectants or a household cleaning spray, are a good idea."

As coronavirus spreads, many questions and some answers - Harvard Health Blog
 
  • #645
  • #646
Great advice to air out your house. Let some sunshine in, too. Grandma was right, sunlight is a great disinfectant.

I did a major grocery shopping at Publix in central Florida. It was busy, with management bagging and running the registers. There was a sign near the tissue, asking people to limit their purchase to two. Didn't see any other limits on paper goods or cleaning supplies. Both of those items were in good supply. Didn't check on sanitizers as I don't use it.

Loaded up on protein, frozen veg, canned soup. If we have to hide out in the house, I'm ready!

I found a nifty product on Amazon ~ soap film. I'm allergic to many soaps, so I wanted my own. It is a plastic container with wafer thin films of soap.
 
  • #647
you, dear Henry, apparently did NOT grow up
in the country. ;)
Ha...my friend...I Did..maybe it was the memories....and the reference to crazies... :D:cool:
 
  • #648
This toilet paper mania.....
Seems people are more concerned with wiped butts than food.

But if you don't have food, you won't need to wipe your butt, right?
 
  • #649
That sounds good.

But I hope people remember that plain soap is a good thing! Just use it, whatever kind you like. No panic to get a specific kind, imo, is worth it.

jmo

I agree, normal soap and water is just as good! Hand sanitiser is good though for when people are out and about. Part of my work means I am in the community having contact with vulnerable people - I don't always have access to soap and water, so I have my sanitiser handy.
 
  • #650
  • #651
  • #652
Yikes to everything.
 
  • #653
It is not just the youngsters.
I was on the train and saw a woman,well over 50 sit eating crisps,wipe her lips,then touch the seat and tray in front of her.She did this repeatedly.

YUCK!!! OMG! eeks.
 
  • #654
Probably a good idea.
"According to the WHO, coronaviruses may survive on surfaces for just a few hours or several days, although many factors will influence this, including surface material and weather.

That’s why personal preventive steps like frequently washing hands with soap and water or an alcohol-based hand sanitizer, and wiping down often-touched surfaces with disinfectants or a household cleaning spray, are a good idea."

As coronavirus spreads, many questions and some answers - Harvard Health Blog
Well you can always use a blow torch.....that would wipe out the virus on surfaces right?
 
  • #655
  • #656
Great point! Antibacterial soaps don't kill viruses.
Antibacterial soaps don't kill viruses

Can Hand Sanitizer Actually Kill the Coronavirus?

There's a solid amount of research backing up the fact that hand sanitizer can kill some viruses, and it definitely has a place in coronavirus prevention, says Kathleen Winston, Ph.D., R.N., dean of nursing at the University of Phoenix. In a study published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases, hand sanitizer was effective in killing another type of coronavirus, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus, among other viruses. (Related: Is Coronavirus As Dangerous As It Sounds?)
 
  • #657
I’ve done that while backpacking a couple times. It’s not that bad.:D

I've done it, too. After a dive, you have to sit and off-gas for a while before you dive again. Sits often include a potty break in the jungle. Men go left, women go right.
 
  • #658
Stop touching cash! WHO officials warn that coronavirus can spread through handling money and urge people to use credit cards or electronic payments instead

The World Health Organization has issued a warning that handling money may spread coronavirus and is urging people to stop using cash when they can.

In a warning this week, WHO reminded people that money picks up the disease which can stay on surfaces for hours if not days.

'We know that money changes hands frequently and can pick up all sorts of bacteria and viruses and things like that.

Stop touching cash! WHO officials warn that coronavirus can spread through handling money | Daily Mail Online
 
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