Originally posted by janfrn
However, the petroleum based ones do contribute to the breakdown of latex (remember the advice about not using Vaseline for a lubricant unless you were hoping to get PG?
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I need to see the literature on this one. At work, I, for one, do NOT slather my GLOVED hands with petroleum-based lotion and shove them in and out of a tight body orifice for 30 sec to 10 min!
I only put on lotion as I need it, and after I've washed my hands and think it will be awhile before I'll have to wash them again (after all, I'm buying the darn stuff, I don't want to wash it off five minutes later). I also use some that's supposed to be water resistant (Avon Silicone Gloves or Vaseline Water Resistant) so I don't have to apply it as often.
Our hospital does not have the soap with triclosan in it in most areas unless it's in the room of a patient in isolation. I do not use that particular soap even if the patient is in isolation because I would have to de-gown and de-glove to wash my hands IN THE ISOLATION PATIENT'S ROOM since we don't have little anterooms for that. So I de-gown and de-glove, throw them away in the patient's room, then go wash my hands at the nearest sink (which has the "regular" soap). The triclosan lotion tears my hands up something fierce, and I have to be on the lookout for it, because when housekeeping cleans an isolation room, they don't discard the isolation soap, and for awhile I was using it accidentally until someone pointed it out to me. My hands cleared up well after that.