Difference between revisions of "Ridesharing protocol"
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=== After your journey === | === After your journey === | ||
− | Make sure '''everyone has safely entered their homes/destinations''' before driving away | + | * Make sure '''everyone has safely entered their homes/destinations''' before driving away |
− | '''Wash your hands after leaving the vehicle''', before removing your face covering | + | * '''Wash your hands after leaving the vehicle''', before removing your face covering |
− | '''Wash your hands again''' after '''removing your face covering''' | + | * '''Wash your hands again''' after '''removing your face covering''' |
− | Follow '''hygiene procedures of your household''' when returning | + | * Follow '''hygiene procedures of your household''' when returning |
− | '''Clean areas of the vehicle that are likely to have been handled''' on the journey, using bleach solution or soapy water | + | * '''Clean areas of the vehicle that are likely to have been handled''' on the journey, using bleach solution or soapy water |
Revision as of 15:01, 10 June 2020
This protocol is a draft. It has not yet been accepted as protocol and may be incorrect or poorly cited. Please do not use this in your work until it has been accepted.
Please see #protocols on Slack to discuss this protocol further.
This page is specific to the COVID-19 pandemic. Our covid protocol still focuses on somewhat older science relating to droplet transmission. We are currently reviewing this. It will be updated rapidly.
This is a protocol for situations when you need to share a car during the COVID-19 pandemic with someone who is not a member of your household.
Contents
When should you be ridesharing?
- You should only consider ridesharing if there is no other way to achieve an essential task such as...
- Providing care for someone
- Going to work
- Attending an essential appointment
- Leaving an unsafe situation (eg domestic violence)
- This list is non-exhaustive and there may be circumstances not on this list where you will need to ride share
- You should not rideshare if you have symptoms of COVID-19.
- However, when assessing the risks you should be mindful that the disease may still be transmitted by people who have no symptoms.
Before your journey
Planning
- Consider if there is any safer alternative way to carry out your task
- Consider whether or not anyone else needs to come, in order to limit the number of passengers
- Discuss risks and hygiene procedures with your household to check how comfortable everyone is with the potential journey
- Discuss risks with the people you will be ridesharing with and check that you are all comfortable with each other’s understanding of hygiene procedures
- Plan routes to be as quick as possible, while considering rest breaks for access reasons
- Prepare journey to minimise the need to fill up petrol - consider a separate trip to petrol station before your ridesharing journey.
Cleaning
- Clean frequently-handled areas of the vehicle with bleach solution, warm soapy water, or anti-microbial disinfectant, e.g.:
- Outside/inside door/boot/trunk handles
- Steering wheel
- Gear stick and handbrake
- Digital/radio controls
- Seatbelts and seat belt fastenings
- Window controls
- If using bleach solution,
- Mix 1 part bleach to 50 parts water
- Prepare this no more than 24 hours before you use it, as the active ingredient degrades rapidly.
- Wear gloves to protect your skin when applying
- Air the vehicle well during and after cleaning
- Do not apply to seats, as it may damage the fabric/leather
- Remove rubbish such as empty drinking bottles from the car
What to take
- Take hand sanitizer if you have any
- Prepare face coverings:
- use surgical masks if widely available, otherwise use tightly-woven cotton fabric
- bring a change of mask/face covering if you have one, especially if your journey will last more than 2 hours.
- If you may need to eat or drink on the journey, take paper towels to lay your mask on
- Take disposable bags to store used masks and other potentially-contaminated items
During your journey
- Put on face coverings and wash hands before entering the vehicle
- Seat yourselves as far away from each other as possible
- Open all windows as widely as possible. In bad weather, leave them open as far as you can, and open them fully at regular intervals.
- Keep your faces directed towards the open windows as much as possible, especially if you feel you are going to cough or sneeze.
- Talk only when necessary during the journey - talking will increase the number of infectious particles you may emit. [1] [2]
- Do not use air-conditioning or heating systems which recirculate air from inside the car: this may spread infectious droplets throughout the vehicle [3]
- For drivers - when your windows are open, maintain as much distance as possible from cyclists and pedestrians, 2m at absolute minimum
- Considering playing music or a podcast as a form of entertainment, in lieu of prolonged conversation!
Rest breaks and food
- Limit time spent at petrol stations and motor services, if you cannot avoid these.
- Use hand sanitiser after any essential stops where you cannot wash your hands.
- If you need to eat something, try to do so during a rest break outside the car, or with the car doors open.
- If you do have to eat while inside the car, make sure that you are facing an open window.
- Remove face coverings fully to eat or drink, rather than pushing them up or down. (See instructions below)
- Immediately store all used food and drink packaging, tissues, wet-wipes, etc in a disposable bag
Face coverings
- If you must remove your face covering to eat, or for any other reason:
- Use hand sanitiser before and after you remove your face covering, or wash your hands if you are at a rest stop.
- Handle used face coverings by the ties/earloops only. Do not touch the face area.
- If possible, store the used face covering in a bag and put on a fresh one after eating.
- If you will need to put the same face covering back on, place it on a disposable paper towel or tissue, outer side facing down.[4]
- Make sure you put it back on with the same side facing outwards.
- Sanitise/wash your hands before and after you replace your face covering,
- Change your face covering every 2 hours, or more frequently if the fabric has become damp with moisture from your mouth.[5]
After your journey
- Make sure everyone has safely entered their homes/destinations before driving away
- Wash your hands after leaving the vehicle, before removing your face covering
- Wash your hands again after removing your face covering
- Follow hygiene procedures of your household when returning
- Clean areas of the vehicle that are likely to have been handled on the journey, using bleach solution or soapy water
- ↑ Stadnytskyi et al The airborne lifetime of small speech droplets and their potential importance in SARS-CoV-2 transmission; Accessed: 2020-05-24
- ↑ Shen et al Airborne transmission of COVID-19: epidemiologic evidence from two outbreak investigations; Accessed: 2020-05-25
- ↑ [{{{3}}} Nebraska Medicine, 'Universal Masking Guidelines'; Accessed: 2020-05-24]
- ↑ Kelkar et al, 'How effective are face masks in operating theatre?'; Accessed: 2020-05-24