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Only a third of the public think the NHS is providing a good service nationally, yet support for the founding principles remains strong
The public think that the standard of care of the NHS and social care have got worse over the past 12 months, and only a third of the public think the NHS is providing a good service nationally, according to a new Ipsos survey for The Health Foundation.
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Britons are more likely to trust Labour on policies surrounding immigration and asylum, but the Conservatives are closing the gap
Few say Suella Braverman is doing a good job as Home Secretary, but proportion who say she is doing badly has fallen
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Feasibility Study for future research on how people approach paying for care
The Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) has commissioned Ipsos and the Care Policy Evaluation Centre (CPEC) at LSE to conduct a project to explore how to best collect data on adults’ care needs, care history and how people approach paying for care. DHSC needs robust, accurate and reliable information about these to understand how people interact with, and are supported by, the adult social care system.
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Public perceptions of Nicola Sturgeon dip, while over half of Scots are critical of Scottish Government performance on the NHS
Perceptions of Nicola Sturgeon fall but Rishi Sunak still has a long way to go to catch up
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Ipsos Climate Change & Sustainability Practice
The Ipsos sustainability practice leverages research specialisms and cross-sector expertise to understand governments, businesses, and citizens to inform better decision making when it comes to all aspects of environment, social and governance (ESG).
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Public perceptions of homelessness
Rising housing costs are taking their toll while three-quarters of people think homelessness will get worse according to a new Ipsos report for the Centre for Homelessness Impact.
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A sustainable future for me, my world and the world
The following provides a summary write-up of a panel session that Ipsos chaired at the Anthropy event held at The Eden Project at the beginning of November 2022. This provides an overview of the key points that were discussed and the main take-outs from the discussion.
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54% lack confidence in quality of local NHS services for this winter as concerns over waiting lists intensify
The December Ipsos Political Monitor, taken 7-13 December, shows the level of public concern over the NHS for this winter
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Gen Z: grounds for optimism?
Are there grounds for optimism about Britain’s youngest generation, and what might this mean for government and labour market? Data suggests that despite the pandemic, inflation, and war, the British public’s optimism for today’s youth has risen gently. Generational analysis suggests the youngest cohort, Generation Z, feels a little less pessimistic about their economic situation compared with Millennials when they were a similar age. But are they really a more optimistic group or just a reversion to the mean after the Millennials’ tough experience entering adulthood in the shadow of the 2008 economic crash?
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Harsh home truths
Economic turmoil has brought the housing affordability crisis into sharper relief for mortgage holders and renters. What can Government do? The response to COVID-19 was to pull more levers: eviction bans, mortgage and Stamp Duty holidays. In the Autumn Statement, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced capping social rents in England, but the Scottish Government had already gone further, faster, introducing a freeze on private as well as social rents and a moratorium on evictions. Previously, Michael Gove recommitted the Government to building 300,000 homes a year. Action will take years to deliver results, requiring considerable political courage. Public opinion will need careful management too. Has the housing crisis become bigger and uglier?