Is there any evidence about whether fabric or bare hands would spread covid-19 more from one surface to another? (e.g. opening a door using a fabric glove). Assuming the fabric doesn't touch your face, like bare hands easily do, even with efforts to remember not to people struggle to remember. I've been thinking of prompts to prevent face touching, such as wearing fabric gloves when out and about, but I don't want to promote this unless fabric is at-least-no-worse than hands for transferring the virus between surfaces.
I'm talking about use in the community for instance when people have to travel or go to food shops, not in a healthcare context. The gloves should be changed between different settings (e.g. apartment block, bus, shop - switch to a new pair of gloves for each). The gloves should be ironed hot at the end of each day.
As far as I can tell from my attempts searching, this is evidence based, but I'm keen to know from someone who is better at interpreting evidence in this field if it is sensible.