Bank of Ireland rises to number one in the July BrandShout, the first time a bank has taken the top spot. Aldi has dropped one place to joint second with Vodafone. Followed by Lidl in fourth and the HSE/Covid-19 holding steady in fifth.
Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic, inflammatory joint disease. In developed countries, it affects 0.5% to 1% of the adult population, with a two to three times higher frequency in women compared to men, regardless of age. Currently, no cure exists, however, treatments that are available worldwide can reduce progression of joint damage in up to 90% of patients.
On average, almost four in ten across 29 countries (a global country average of 37%), think worse mental health and wellbeing among children and young people will be a long-lasting outcome of the pandemic, according to new global study from Ipsos.
On average, almost four in ten across 29 countries (a global country average of 37%), think worse mental health and wellbeing among children and young people will be a long-lasting outcome of the pandemic, according to new global study from Ipsos.
On average, almost four in ten across 29 countries (a global country average of 37%), think worse mental health and wellbeing among children and young people will be a long-lasting outcome of the pandemic, according to new global study from Ipsos.
Confidence about returning to activities varies across nine countries surveyed says a new Ipsos study conducted in partnership with the World Economic Forum
Ipsos MRBI has worked with HRB Ireland on the National Drug and Alcohol Survey since 2002. The latest results find that more people are using illegal stimulants, smoking less, and binge drinking remains high.
Aldi steps up one place to the top spot in brand recall for June, followed by Vodafone and then Coke/Diet Coke (both brands ranked sixth in May). Virgin Media is up six places to number four, followed by HSE/Covid-19 in fifth position, its lowest registered so far this year.
Just over a third of people on average in 28 countries across the world (a Global Country Average of 35%) think that their country is divided by “culture wars” according to a new Ipsos Global Advisor poll, carried out in partnership with the Policy Institute at King’s College London. Despite this, however, there is wide variation in this opinion when looking at individual countries, and many don’t have a strong view.