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Market Access & HEOR
The complete spectrum of market access & HEOR services, powered by payer insights, economic modelling and global syndicated real-world evidence.
Public Policy Improvement
Understanding perceptions of citizens, public service users and other stakeholders.
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Spotlight*KSA: Views on Healthcare in Saudi Arabia - June 2019
Perceptions of Saudis towards the healthcare system ranging from personal health to the technologies utilized.
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Ipsos Update - April 2019
This month’s edition features Ipsos research and thinking on technology and healthcare, nationality and inclusivity, Indian cuisine, virtual reality, text analytics and more.
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Connected Health: A roadmap to success
Connected Health is moving into the mainstream – how will this change the traditional structure of healthcare?
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The Future of ageing
Global study finds high levels of concern about ageing and paints a negative picture for later life.
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Childhood Obesity in the GCC
Responsibility for increasing obesity rates lies on parents, manufacturers and policy makers
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Our misperceptions about crime and violence, sex, climate change, the economy and other key issues
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception study shows which key facts the online public across 37 countries get right about their society – and which they get wrong. Now in its fifth year, the survey aims to highlight how we’re wired to think in certain ways and how our environment influences our (mis)perceptions.
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Ipsos Update - December 2018
December’s edition features global reports on local infrastructure, entrepreneurialism and connected health as well as new papers on AI and corporate reputation, communication strategies and Black Friday. And to mark the end of the year, we highlight the key Ipsos polls, reports and white papers of 2018.
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YouthView: Understanding risk behaviours for meningitis among young people
While meningococcal meningitis is relatively uncommon, it is unpredictable, may progress very rapidly and can lead to death in as little as 24 hours of first symptoms.<sup>1,2</sup>
According to one study, the bacteria that can cause the disease are carried asymptomatically in the nasopharynx of up to almost one in four (24%) 19-year-olds; although for most it will not cause the disease.<sup>3</sup>