Other think tanks have also used the data for their own work – and much of it focuses on the issue of funding.
In June, the Institute for Public Policy Research released Better health and care for all: A 10-point plan for the 2020s, which sets out a 10-point ‘investment and reform plan’, while the Scottish Social Attitudes Survey has prompted coverage suggesting that people are happy with tax rises, as long as the money is ring-fenced for the NHS.
The IFS, too, has specifically considered this, with myanmar rcs data Senior Research Economist Elaine Kelly writing for the Times in May that ‘Difficult choices lie ahead on how good we want the NHS to be’.
The Nuffield Trust has noted “a sharp, alarming drop in public satisfaction with the NHS“.
Finally, the King’s Fund has produced an overview, The public and the NHS, on the British Social Attitudes Survey and what it tells us about public opinion on a range of NHS issues, such as government spending and who’s responsible for providing healthcare.
News coverage
There has been widespread coverage of the research in the run-up to 5 July, including on the BBC, in the Guardian, and by others.
We collect news items which feature data held in the UK Data Service collection on our Scoop.it! page.