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Polling reveals ethnic minorities and people with multiple long term health conditions more likely to express dissatisfaction with NHS care
Polling released ahead of the publication of the 10-year health plan for the NHS shows experiences of the NHS are broadly good, but variable.
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Better Care Fund Support Programme (2023-2025) Findings
Ipsos UK, in partnership with the Institute of Public Care at Oxford Brookes University (IPC), was commissioned by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) to conduct an evaluation of the Better Care Fund Support Programme.
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Migration, Skills, and Public Trust: Rethinking the UK's Policy Approach
The Government should take this opportunity to reconsider the role of immigration in addressing labour market demands through the implementation of its Immigration White Paper.
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Healthcare vs Evolution: Can GLP-1s Rewrite Our Evolutionary Story?
Our evolutionary tale began 6 million years ago, when humans were programmed to hoard calories in a world of scarcity. Today, that ancient wiring has become our greatest health risk.
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Inside Ipsos’ Spending Review Briefing
As political and economic stakes rise across the UK, Ipsos’ second Beyond the Bubble webinar of the year couldn’t have arrived at a more pivotal time.
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Conflicting Global Perceptions around AI present Mixed Signals for Brands
In an atmosphere of both worry and wonder surrounding the use of AI, trust issues abound. Our 30-country report reveals regional differences in the level of excitement about advances in artificial intelligence, confidence in responsible use, and expectations of future impacts.
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Reeves’ approval ratings mirror Kwarteng’s post mini-budget as over half of Britons think the UK is now in a period of austerity. Public is split on the key decisions and trade-offs facing the Chancellor ahead of the Spending Review
Half (51%) of Britons say that Rachel Reeves is doing a bad job as Chancellor (16% good job). These ratings are near identical to Kwasi Kwarteng’s in the aftermath of the September 2022 mini-budget.
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Ipsos partners with the University of Kent in a new research project to assess the costs and benefits of homecare services in England
Ipsos is pleased to announce its participation in a new research project which will assess the value for money that home care services provide to people receiving care and their families in England.
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Just 1 in 5 would support the Chancellor breaking her fiscal rules, but support increases if it means more money for public services - though public awareness of rules is low
Two in five (40%) believe it would be a good thing for Chancellor to break her fiscal rules, if it meant raising more money for higher quality public services. However, they are less supportive of breaking the rules in principle (20%) or if it leads to more borrowing (14%) or higher taxes (15%).
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On second anniversary of King Charles III’s coronation, 44% of Britons want the ceremony for the next monarch to be smaller in scale
44% of Britons favour a smaller-scale coronation for the next monarch, compared to 38% who want one of a similar scale and 11% a larger ceremony. Britons are similarly split over whether too much or the right amount of money was spent on King Charles’ coronation.