Washing your hands with soap and water will never damage you in any way, really. That over washing is damaging our skin barrier is stupid, really. Soap and water is friendly to our skin tissues, nothing wrong with this.
Well in my experience 'washing the dishes' everyday where the air is cold and dry causes the skin on my hands to crack and dry out moreso than if I weren't doing them, of course this is dish detergent and not hand soap I am talking about.
Although my girlfriend 'pretends' to be OCD about hand washing using common hand soap, and claims this also has a similar effect (paraphrased of course).
Anyway, more wonderful vaccine news:
Health care worker dies after second dose of covid vaccine. Investigations underway.
But let's not be pessimistic shall we. I suppose the odds are favorable, but why take a chance. At least that's the way I see it.
Of course there are the 'other' perspectives that vary conversely, so, whatever.
Edit : formatting was compactified, again.
I just had a brief conversation with a person who just got inoculated and she's alright.
I had a conversation with quite many people who just got inoculated. That was my colleagues and patients. About one third suffered from adverse side effects like high fever, awful stomachache and muscle pain. One patient was taken to the hospital. Another patient got some inflammation in her arm that caused swelling. She's still suffering from it. One colleague felt worse after the vaccine than when she got covid. And that was only the first weaker dose. Although none of my acquaintances kicked the bucket yet and two thirds of them were all right, still one third with adverse effects that were by no means mild, is too much for the vaccine to be considered safe. Especially that the same colleagues who got covid vaccine, also used to get a flu vaccine in the past and didn't suffer from any side effects.
I haven't been inoculated yet. But I think that even major side effects which are predictable and treatable are preferred to unpredictable and untreatable states of covid.