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Three strikes and you're out of favour with the public
Anna Quigley and Harry Evans blog in the HSJ on why public sympathy with the junior doctors comes with some big caveats.
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Widespread public support for junior doctors' strike
New polling from Ipsos finds that most in England are supportive of the planned junior doctors' strikes, as long as emergency care is still provided.
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Experiences of people with long term conditions - what does GPPS data tell us?
Rachel Burkitt looks at the most recent data from Ipsos's GP Patient Survey and what the survey tells us about the experiences of people living with long term conditions.
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Ipsos Research Highlights - July 2015
Find all the latest Ipsos social and market research for the last month collated here in one easily accessible document. This month we have been reflecting in particular on how much, and how little, things have changed since 1975, as part of Ipsos' 40th anniversary.
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Public Attitudes to Assisted Dying
Ipsos surveyed adults in 15 countries on attitudes towards assisted dying laws
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Why are our perceptions about the military so far off the mark?
From the UK, to Canada, Australia and the United States – our opinions about the military are usually wrong, says Bobby Duffy in The Conversation.
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Hearts and Minds: misperceptions and the military
Ipsos and King's College London are releasing a new international survey that highlights what the public in Britain, the US, France, Australia and Canada get right and wrong about the military and the armed forces.
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Mid Staffs: what impact has it had?
We explore how, if at all, Mid Staffs has impacted on public perceptions of quality in the health service.
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Mental health services and spending: what do the public think?
A recent Ipsos poll indicated that almost four in five people believe the proportion of spend on mental health services should increase in the future; we explore why the public might hold this view.
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What do MPs think of randomised controlled trials (RCTs)?
A survey of MPs' attitudes has found unexpected support for using randomised controlled trials to test social policy. It also found tensions over fairness, and a preference for personal stories when talking to the public.