Mental Health


Mental Health Survey

Ipsos World Mental Health Day Report

Younger people (particularly young women) are the most likely to feel depressed and take time off work due to stress according to an Ipsos report for World Mental Health Day 2024
Public Health Survey

Ipsos Health Service Report 2024: Mental Health seen as the biggest Health issue

Across 31 countries 44% rate the quality of the healthcare they receive as good, but access to treatment and not enough staff are seen as major systemic challenges
Healthcare Survey

Data Dive: Coronavirus crisis leaves scars, lessons in its wake

Four years after the WHO first declared a global health emergency we look at how views on everything from inflation to mental health have changed since 2020.
Ipsos Update Publication

Ipsos Update – November 2023

Health, trust, ESG… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
Happiness Survey

Global happiness up six points since last year: 73% now say they are happy

Global survey unveils drivers of happiness, finds life satisfaction roaring in Latin America but dropping in many Western countries; while people strive for social connections, many are pessimistic about the future of relationships and one in five say they have no one to turn to for support.
Mental Health Survey

World Mental Health Day 2022: Three in four globally say mental and physical health are equally important

Mental health now ranks 2nd among global health concerns, overtaking cancer

Mental Health Survey

World Mental Health Day 2021

Our 30-country survey finds a large majority think their mental health and physical health are equally important, but they do not see this reflected in their country’s healthcare services.
Mental Health Survey

Impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on health

How COVID-19 has changed the overall health of people? In what areas did their health decline or remain stable? To what extent did people experience new health problems or worsen pre-existing conditions? What proportion of individuals gave up treatment or care during the pandemic? For what reasons? Was this absence of treatments or visits compensated by a greater use of telemedicine and digital applications?