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What Worries the World: How has Covid-19 has changed the outlook?
Local perspectives on our issues tracker during the pandemic.
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Changing Paradigms: The Past, Present & Future of Autoimmune Treatment
Watch the recording from our latest Healthcare webinar, where our autoimmune disease experts share a holistic (physician & payer) view of the rapidly evolving therapy landscape in Europe.
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Ipsos Update – June 2021
Global population dynamics, empathy in healthcare, the pandemic experience in Africa and a focus on Italy are all featured in this month’s round-up of the latest research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Bringing the patient voice to the fore
Using social data to understand how to bring more empathy into the HCP-patient relationship in changing healthcare environments
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European barometer on rare diseases
Europeans do not accept fatalism!
On the occasion of World Rare Disease Day, Ipsos and ASAP FOR CHILDREN present the results of a large survey in 10 European Union countries (11,400 interviews). -
Attitudes to COVID-19 vaccines
The global rollout of COVID-19 vaccines will be the largest, fastest and most challenging vaccination program in history. This could bring many problems. Some we will anticipate; some we won’t. One glaring problem that is quickly emerging is a major mismatch between vaccine supply and demand.
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Global Health Service Monitor 2020
Our new 27-country survey finds rising levels of satisfaction and trust in health services as the world battles against the coronavirus pandemic. Waiting times and lack of staff are the main challenges perceived by the public.
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Global Vaccines Research
As the race to develop a COVID-19 vaccine continues at speed, the world faces many more questions than answers – not only about when we might have a vaccine, but who will get it first, how will they get it and are they willing to have it? And how far will it take us on the journey back to ‘normal’…?
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Global travelers feel comfortable visiting Switzerland in the near future
Germany, Canada, and New Zealand are most favorably impacted, while the United States, Brazil, and India are seen unfavorably.
Based on nations’ handling of health crises, most travelers are more comfortable traveling domestically as opposed to internationally over the next five years.