Title pretty much covers it. I have two warts (that are currently being battled with frozen something-or-other by a dermatologist, if that changes anything) on my hand. Should I wear gloves when handling items I intend to sell or knitting items to sell? The knit items are toys, by the way, so kids would probably come in contact with them.
Kind of a trivial question, but I don’t want to infect anyone with a virus that might cause them serious health problems (and maybe a wart or two).
(This is strange, but I’m actually pretty embarrassed about this. Warts are so ugly. Even the word is ugly.)
Probably neither here nor there, but my insurance company (Blue Cross) apparently doesn’t think so. It pissed me off that they denied coverage as “elective” for removing a wart from my teenaged daughter’s hand.
I can’t imagine being in the OP’s position and caring about a wart one way or the other. I can’t imagine being a buyer of the OP’s work and caring one way or the other.
Warts are small, almost invisble bumps which don’t ooze. Compared to the amount of dead skin, loose hairs, & body oil you leave on any handicraft you make, cooties from warts are negligible in a practical sense.
And *should *be negligible in an emotional sense, at least if the “ick” emotion has any basis in reality.
They might not ooze, but they are contagious, no? My ignorance is in how contagious and if that’s really a medical problem for other people (immune system compromised, or young children).
I don’t know whether you can spread warts by handling items, but why don’t you ask your dermatologist? Pretty sure they’d have told you to take precautions if it was contagious, but it can’t hurt to ask, right?
Just going by the entry in WebMD, it appears that children are especially susceptible to warts since their immune systems aren’t quite up to snuff yet. Also, the article claims that the wart virus is fairly hardy, i.e. it can survive on the monkeybars after a kid with warts touches them and pass it on to another kid.
That being said, I wonder how long the virus could really live on yarn. At any rate, you should probably cover the wart for your own sake, to avoid giving it back to yourself in another location.