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Public Attitudes Towards HIV
Findings from this Ipsos survey suggest there is a declining knowledge among the British public with regards to HIV infection and personal risk. While most people are able to identify that sex without a condom between a man and a woman (79%) and between two men (79%), are possible ways HIV is transmitted these proportions represent declines from 2000 (from 91% and 88% respectively, in 2000). Knowledge is particularly low in London despite the higher prevalence of HIV in the capital.
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Ipsos Political Monitor March 2006
Questions on voting intention, satisfaction with party leaders, the key issues facing Britain, economic optimism, party identification, past voting behaviour, immigration, drink driving and personal finance.
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Deloitte / Government Delivery Index
Two in five British adults (38%) think that the Government's policies will improve the state of Britain's economy in the long-term, while 48% disagree. Fewer are optimistic about the public services, with one in three (32%) thinking that the Government's policies will improve public services, while a majority (55%) disagree with this.
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Ipsos Political Monitor February
British electors' attitudes to the new Tory Leader David Cameron have not shifted over the past month, according to the latest Ipsos's February Political Monitor for The Sun. The poll, conducted between 16 and 20 February among 1,958 British adults aged 18+, continues to show that over half the public (52%) are hesitant to express an opinion about the way David Cameron is doing his job.
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Ipsos Political Monitor, January 2006
Ipsos's latest Political Monitor confirms the relative popularity of the new Conservative leader, David Cameron, among the general public. The poll, conducted between 19 and 23 January among 2,078 British adults, shows that 31% of public is satisfied with David Cameron's performance as leader of the Conservative Party, with 17% dissatisfied.
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Britain Today
Questions about happiness, worries, voting intention, Britain and being British, society, public services, perception of party leaders, sentencing/ punishment for crimes and spiritual beliefs.
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'Choice? What Choice?' Say Patients
Most people aged 40+ (around three in four) are willing to go to either NHS or private hospitals so long as they receive assurances over minimum standards of care, a MORI survey conducted for the Dept of Health, just publicly released, shows. However, awareness among this population group about the much heralded 'patient choice' agenda is currently very low: only four per cent say they know 'a great deal' about patient choice, and 15% 'a fair amount'. Conversely, two in five (41%) say they know absolutely nothing about choice in healthcare, with 39% knowing 'just a little' about it.
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Over 3.5 Million In Britain Do Not Seek Help For Hearing Loss
On behalf of RNID, Ipsos Social Research Institute conducted research among the general public in Great Britain to measure experience of hearing loss and explore why some people with hearing difficulties do not seek specialist help.
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Pfizer/MORI Health Choice Index - Public Opinions On Choice In Out Of Hospital Care
The inaugural Pfizer/MORI Health Choice Index provides encouraging findings for the Government's policies relating to the introduction of more choice and contestability in healthcare.
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Ipsos Political Monitor November
More of the British public is satisfied (49%) with the way that Gordon Brown is doing his job as Chancellor of the Exchequer than is dissatisfied (35%), giving a net satisfaction score of +14%. With the exception of the Autumn of 2000, during the petrol crisis, MORI's surveys have consistently shown that, on balance, the public is satisfied with the Chancellor's performance. In contrast, over half the public is dissatisfied (55%) with Tony Blair's performance as Prime Minister, with less than two in five (37%) expressing dissatisfaction.