Panicked sex doll companies reassure randy weirdos you can't catch coronavirus from romping with one

SEX doll manufacturers are frantically reassuring customers they can't catch coronavirus from their X-rated products.

Greedy firms are keen to cash in on quarantined – and frustrated – weirdos and are even claiming the silicone dolls are "naturally anti-bacterial".

On Instagram, Abyss, which creates the RealDolls brand of replica women, posted: "Self isolating doesn't have to be the worst!

"All RealDolls are made from platinum grade silicone, and are naturally antibacterial and nonporous! Want one?"

But one unimpressed person pointed out that Covid-19 "is a virus, not a bacteria".

Questions remain unanswered in terms of how long the coronavirus can live in the air and on a variety of surfaces, before infecting other people.

There is no vaccine to prevent the disease, and the best way to prevent illness is to avoid being exposed to the new virus, which has alread killed more than 13,000 people across the globe.


Real Sex Dolls Reviews notes that "many people" are concerned "that they might get infected with the highly contagious respiratory infection caused by Covid-19.

"Sex doll industries have been greatly affected as most of the products were made and delivered from China.

"Is there really a high risk of product-to-human viral transmission? One firm answer: No!

"There is no medical proof that upholds this claim.

"Sex dolls assembled or imported from China have no harm to the people."

The piece doesn't quote any scientific tests conducted on dolls, but dangerously urges enthusiasts to "drop your fear that this epidemic will break your sexual fantasies with sex dolls.

"It would only lead you to major dissatisfaction."

Bug lives 'for days'

However, that information was put online a month ago – and there have been many more studies on the spread of the killer bug since then.

Governments around the world, along with health organisations such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommend cleaning your hands often, and to avoid close contact with those infected with the virus.

The CDC also recommends cleaning and disinfecting "frequently touched surfaces daily, including tables, doorknobs, light switches, countertops, handles, desks, phones, keyboards, toilets, facets and sinks".

The contagious bug can live on cardboard delivery boxes "for at least a day, and lives even longer on steel and plastic", according to Technology Review.

And Live Science reports that "we don't know" how long the coronavirus lingers on any type of surface.

A study in The Journal of Hospital Infection concluded that it might be able to stay on metal, glass, plastic and other surfaces for up to nine days.

Carolyn Machamer, a professor of cell biology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, said last week, "you are more likely to catch the infection through the air if you are next to someone infected, than off a surface.

"Cleaning surfaces with disinfectant or soap is very effective because once the oily surface coat of the virus is disabled, there is no way the virus can infect a host cell.

"However, there cannot be an overabundance of caution. Nothing like this has ever happened before."



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