(no subject)
Mar. 3rd, 2020 02:03 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
[mild cw: illness]
Something I haven't yet seen any preparation guides include:
Moisturiser!
Take it from a food-service worker: frequent hand-washing does a *number* on your skin. Not only is dry skin unpleasant, if your skin gets dry enough it can actually crack, and now you've got a bunch of tiny wounds on your hands. Needless to say, tiny wounds on your hands are very bad if you're aiming to keep germs out.
Personally, I buy the big (one-litre, I think) bottles of Loblaws house brand. I use it a minimum of once a day (at bedtime, so that I'm not touching much else until it's had a chance to absorb), but if it's a *very* hand-washy day I'll do it two or three times, with a particularly liberal application at bedtime.
Something I haven't yet seen any preparation guides include:
Moisturiser!
Take it from a food-service worker: frequent hand-washing does a *number* on your skin. Not only is dry skin unpleasant, if your skin gets dry enough it can actually crack, and now you've got a bunch of tiny wounds on your hands. Needless to say, tiny wounds on your hands are very bad if you're aiming to keep germs out.
Personally, I buy the big (one-litre, I think) bottles of Loblaws house brand. I use it a minimum of once a day (at bedtime, so that I'm not touching much else until it's had a chance to absorb), but if it's a *very* hand-washy day I'll do it two or three times, with a particularly liberal application at bedtime.
no subject
Date: 2020-03-03 09:22 pm (UTC)I would definitely give moisturiser a try: you might find that that alone is enough to fix your problem.