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Britain’s role models – NHS workers, teachers and armed forces top the list
Social media influencers, reality TV stars and politicians are deemed bad role models in Ipsos's new poll
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Report | Beyond the white coat
In this article, we look ‘beyond the white coat’ at the people providing frontline healthcare services. We explore the preconceptions which shape the care they deliver to patients, and the pressures determining their longevity as a doctor.
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Ipsos Update – July 2021
Discover new global studies on attitudes to refugees, LGBT+ equality, culture wars and sustainable development. Also explore our latest white papers. including a spotlight on Indonesian society.
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What A Difference A Year Makes: Profiling the ‘Digital Doctor’ in 2021
Ipsos’ latest Digital Doctor results show how specific knowledge of and experience with digital health has increased during the pandemic
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Bringing the patient voice to the fore
Using social data to understand how to bring more empathy into the HCP-patient relationship in changing healthcare environments
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Global public backs COVID-19 vaccine passports for international travel
Survey finds mixed views about mandating vaccine certificates for everyday activities
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COVID-19 one year on: Global public loses confidence in institutions
Tracking survey data shows who gained and lost with the public over the past year.
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Proportion of Britons who want to see immigration reduced falls to lowest level since 2015
The proportion of those who want to see immigration in Britain reduced has fallen to its lowest level for the first time since our series of longitudinal surveys with IMIX began in February 2015.
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Ipsos Veracity Index 2020
Nurses, doctors and engineers are the most trusted professions in the Ipsos Veracity Index 2020, while politicians, government ministers and advertising executives are least trusted. Three quarters of Britons trust care home workers and home delivery drivers.
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Changing gears: Understanding downward social mobility
One in five people experience downward mobility in their lives, with some moving into a vicious cycle of low pay and low self-esteem, new research by Ipsos for the Social Mobility Commission (SMC) found.