I'm not much inclined to agree with this /\, but it does bring up the issue of protecting the employees.
Sanitizing equipment, for any amount of time, without the gloves, could do a lot of damage to a person's skin.
The issue is APPEARING to protect: gloves and masks are used like strolling policepeople, mainly to pamper people's peace of mind.
As I said, I was discussing the logic behind the gloving up, not what is actually achieved with that.
Picture the southern coastal area of Barcelona, 2000: belamo "working" with some catering services on a boat filled with guiris, touching a slice of Spanish omelette with one bare hand, and being asked by the waiter in charge whether he considered that a pretty thing to do: it may have not been pretty, but sure it was not unhealthy, let alone health-threatening.
Picture Beijing University, academic year 2003-2004: in a group of belamo's acquaintances, one of them observing that another (not belamo this time

) had dirtied one toothpick that he had taken and put back in the holder, belamo observes back that the toothpick had only been dirtied a bit more than it already was.
Again, it is all about peace of mind and blissful ignorance, then about sensational "scary" stories to "have fun" from a distance every now and then.
My first thought with this pandemic issue, even when it was only a "Chinese thing", is that the virus was more similar to the common flu, and not something more aggresive, because filth is such a big part of our daily lives, no matter how sanitized, that the dirt that is usually harmless can become the biggest weapon of mass destruction if it is charged by Mother Nature with whatever destructive whim of hers that even the evilest and coldest-minded character in a blockbuster could not eve dream of ever conceiving.