Greetings, all. I wanted to drop in some info on gloves. I'm not a medical expert, but I think this is reasonably accurate based on what I know and conversations with people who deal with this sort of thing.
As discussed on this page (
https://www.sacbee.com/news/nation-world/national/article241129091.html), which I selected somewhat randomly,
It might seem logical that gloves could help prevent you from touching infected surfaces, but it doesn’t really work that way outside of a clinical setting... if you’re touching unclean surfaces with gloves and then touching your face, you might as well not wear them at all...You’d have to change your gloves or wash and disinfect them as often as you would your hands in order for them to be effective, according to the publication.
You get the virus primarily by breathing and otherwise via mucous membranes in your face. Medical workers who handle bodily fluids may need hand protection, but (assuming your skin is intact) casual contact in other situations won’t infect you via your hands if you don’t touch your face or other body parts with accessible mucous membranes (I'll let you think about what those might be.)
Gloves may give you a false sense of security and you’ll forget about not touching your face, or, perhaps, they might give you a visual reminder and help you. If you are touching a lot of whatever, your gloves will accumulate germs and you’ll still need to wash at some point before touching yourself or your things.
Washing with soap and water (for 20 seconds) is the best protection. Alcohol gel is for when you can’t get to soap and water right away.
The virus remains on surfaces for a relatively long time, so you generally shouldn’t touch your face at all unless you’re recently washed.
The above referenced article said:
A new study found the COVID-19 virus remains viable up to three hours later in the air, up to four hours on copper, up to 24 hours on cardboard and up to two to three days on plastic and stainless steel.
Since my partner works in a hospital

, when he comes home he changes clothes outside and those things get washed (along with paper currency in a lingerie washing bag), plus he wipes the various surfaces - phone, lunchbox, shoes, etc. I wear a mask, not gloves, when I handle those things in case of flinging the virus around.
Stay safe, everyone!