Data Resources on the COVID-19 Pandemic
last update vor 2 Jahren
A number of national and international research projects are currently underway that empirically
record the economic and social effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The collection is wide and ranges
from snapshots of surveys with self-selected samples, representative surveys, longitudinal studies,
experiments, etc..
IZA’s Research Data Center (IDSC) collects and curates the information on such new initiatives.
Projects with high research output based on number of IZA Discussion Papers or otherwise are
promoted especially as “featured resources” on the top of our website.
Please contact the IDSC of IZA for any suggestions of further content at
idsc@iza.org.
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2020 HRS COVID-19 Project (Early V1.0)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19HRS added COVID-19-related questions to the 2020 core interview and to the psychosocial self-administered questionnaire (pages 36-43), and a special midterm data release is now available. In addition, a new Contextual Data Resource on state-level COVID-19 policies has been added as part of the HRS restricted data products. A supplementary 2021 COVID-19 Mailout Survey is currently in the field through August 2021.
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ABCD COVID-19 Impact Measure
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The COVID-19 Impact Measure was created to be administered to the participants of the NIH-sponsored Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) longitudinal study of 11,880 diverse community youth enrolled at age 9-10 in 2016-2018 (i.e., birth years 2006-2009) at 21 research sites around the United States.
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The ABCD sample was targeted to match U.S. demographics as defined by the American Community Survey (ACS) and is being followed until at least age 20. ABCD will send all currently enrolled participants (age range: 11-13) and their parent/guardian the opportunity to complete the ABCD COVID-19 questionnaires. ABCD's COVID-19 research sends the measure multiple times over several months in 2020.
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American Life Panel Survey on Impacts of COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19A survey fielded through the RAND American Life Panel (ALP) to assess the effects of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic on individuals and households across a variety of topics. Three times per year, all panel members are asked to complete a survey that contains demographic information and questions about their employment status, household composition, health status, well-being, and health insurance.
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ARD-DeutschlandTREND
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Infratest dimap’s ARD-DeutschlandTREND is a survey commissioned by ARD’s “Tagesthemen” and a number of daily newspapers. It periodically polls current attitudes and political opinion in Germany. The DeutschlandTREND is based on representative telephone interviews (CATI) with around 1,000 eligible voters in. In response to significant political and social events, “DeutschlandTREND extra” surveys are additionally conducted outside of the regular cycle especially since March 2020 on COVID-19.
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BfR-Corona-Monitor
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The BfR Corona-Monitor is a recurring representative survey of the German population's perception of risks from the new type of coronavirus. Since 24 March 2020, randomly selected people have been asked by telephone every Tuesday about their perception of the risk of infection and the protective measures they have taken.
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BIDCOFU Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The survey collected a sample of approximately 1,500 UK respondents in Prolific, an online platform collection that connects researchers with participants, who get paid cash for taking part in research. The sample is representative of the UK population with regards age, sex and ethnicity and should be available in August 2020.
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The survey was launched June 2020 and announced with the title “BIDCOFU Survey” with the following brief summary: This study is conducted by researchers from the University of Exeter. Participants will be asked to answer a set of questions on demographic patterns. This includes questions that may be sensitive, including but not limited to questions related to COVID-19, mental health and well-being, physical health and health-related behaviors, concerns and perceptions about COVID-19, its prevalence and lethality, expectations on COVID-19 and unemployment, employment and job characteristics, non-labor market time and changes, behaviors when going out, views on the effectiveness of masks.
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BRAC Rapid Perception Survey on COVID-19 Awareness and Economic Impact
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19BRAC staff collected data from 2,317 households of different socioeconomic backgrounds through both phone interviews (79%) and face to face (21%) interviews using a structured questionnaire. Given the lockdown situation, the survey could not strictly maintain a representative sampling procedure. However, the findings do reflect a country-wide general picture of the people’s awareness of COVID-19 and the economic hardship induced by the lockdown declared to minimise the health risk of the Pandemic.
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Canadian Perspective Survey Series
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Canadian Perspectives Survey Series (CPSS) involves people who agree to complete about six very short online surveys over a period of one year (about one every two months) using randomly sample households from the Labor Force Survey (LFS) out-going rotation groups.
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The first survey of the series focused on the impacts of COVID-19. The second survey of the series focused on monitoring the effect of COVID-19. The third survey of the series focuses on the gradual reopening of economic and social activities during COVID-19.
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Central Asia Barometer Survey Wave 10
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The survey features data from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan. The survey includes data gathered from respondent’s opinions on social issues, international relations, economics, COVID 19, and many other important topics.
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Public Health includes concerns about COVID-19, trust for government source information about COVID-19, governmental measures and restrictions, resources to fight COVID-19, the country best able to provide aid to fight COVID-19, readiness to take a COVID-19 vaccine, preferences over COVID-19 vaccine.
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Citizens’ Attitudes Under the COVID-19 Pandemic Project
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The survey measures ordinary people’s perceptions of and behavioral reactions to the disease caused by COVID-19. It investigates and documents attitudes towards policies on a number of issues – health, the economy, civil liberties – and towards governments and institutions. The project measures representations, attitudes and reactions among the general public in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in a number of countries exposed to the coronavirus. Among others it examines also how people respond to the crisis in terms of economic well-being, tax implications, preferences on the role of the state, economic choices related to the national context and supranational environment (cooperation vs. self-interest).
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The methodological design consisted of a broad series of online public opinion surveys in 18 countries in March and April 2020. The survey was repeated at least 4 times in every country (8 waves in France). All surveys run through CAWI (Computer-assisted web interviewing) on samples going from 2,000 respondents to 1,000 respondents.
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CLEAR Project Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19In order to analyze the impact of COVID-19 measures on households and women in Italy, the researchers used a representative sample of 800 Italian women interviewed in April and July 2019 with the purpose of understanding inequalities in women’s work, savings and pensions. In April 2020, the project repeated the interviews, adding specific questions related to the the COVID-19 crisis.
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The survey was designed to gather data on four main areas that may have been affected by the health emergency: work, housework, childcare and home schooling. The questions asked, show whether the women and their partners were allowed to continue working at their jobs after the lockdown and its effects during the first phase of the emergency.
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CLS | COVID-19 Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19During the coronavirus pandemic, we have been running a series of surveys to find out about the experiences of the participants in five national longitudinal cohort studies. The aim is to understand the economic, social and health impacts of the COVID-19 crisis, the extent to which the pandemic is widening or narrowing inequalities, and the lifelong factors which shape vulnerability and resilience to its effects. We have now completed three waves of the survey. Participants in all four of the national longitudinal cohort studies that we manage at CLS, as well as participants in the MRC National Survey of Health and Development, have taken part. In March 2021, study participants who had taken part in any of these three COVID-19 surveys were asked to provide a blood sample to be analysed for COVID-19 antibodies.
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Constance Homeoffice Study
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The study analyses 699 people who are currently working from home. The surveys were carried out at nine different times during the social and economic restrictions from March to May 2020 including eight subsequent diary studies. In terms of age and gender, the population of the respondents corresponds to the average of the German working population. First results of the survey showed that the perceived productivity and commitment of employees are promoted by working from home and that a large majority would like to continue to work partially on a mobile basis. However, a tendency towards overtime and associated exhaustion is also evident (in German).
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Consumer Pyramids Household Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Consumer Pyramids Household Survey (CPHS), produced by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), is the world's largest household panel survey, a continuous survey of more than 174,000 households in India. CPHS revisits its entire sample in three four-month waves each year, permitting longitudinal analysis starting in January 2014. Overall, CPHS aims to get a sense of the economic well-being of households in India and changes in their well-being over time. Since each household is surveyed three times per year, the survey allows up to five observations per person, subject to attrition, and provide us with a pre- and post-pandemic panel of individuals.
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Consumers and COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Ongoing survey from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland that asks consumers questions related to the recent coronavirus outbreak, including their expectations for how the economy is likely to be affected by the outbreak and how their own behavior has changed in response to it. The survey began in early March, providing a window into how consumers’ responses have evolved in real time since the early days of the acknowledged spread of COVID-19 in the United States. In updating and charting the survey’s findings on the Cleveland Fed’s website going forward, the researchers seek to inform policymakers and researchers about consumers’ beliefs during a time of high uncertainty and unprecedented policy responses.
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The survey is administered on the Qualtrics survey platform, and Qualtrics recruits a nationally representative sample of participants to provide responses. All respondents are required to be US residents, fluent in English, and 18 or older.
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Coordinating Remote Work During COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Qualitative research study at the University of Washington to quickly identify, analyze, and share useful processes, actions, and best practices used by organizations to coordinate social distancing via remote collaborative working. Enduring knowledge about coordination in a complex organization during time of crisis.
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Corona Compass
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Corona Compass study, conducted by infratest dimap, is based on a representative sample of the German population eligible to vote in Germany and with an online access. A standard set of questions includes, among other things, the extent to which corona infections are affected in the personal environment, the evaluation of government measures as a whole, the assessment of various individual measures by the state and of companies, the subjective risk assessment of infection, basic attitudes towards economic and political situation and other key indicators. The standard set has been expanded and modified several times recording the acceptance of new measures that are becoming increasingly important in the public discussion. In addition, the Corona Compass collects various questions from basic behavioral and social science research.
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As such, it is one of the few representative surveys of (family) well-being that exists for Germany. The COMPASS study has more observations and more information on families than other special well-being surveys taken during the COVID-19 crisis.
The data includes satisfaction in three areas that are important for the well-being of families, namely general life satisfaction, satisfaction with family life, and satisfaction with childcare. The data also includes detailed questions on whether individuals with dependent children in the household are affected by school and day care center closures, on the degree to which they feel restricted by public measures taken to contain COVID-19, and on the extent to which they work from home (in German).
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Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The survey looks to identify how many people across England test positive for COVID-19 infection at a given point in time, regardless of whether they report to experiencing symptoms; also, the average number of new infections per week over the course of the study is quantified; and the number of people who test positive for antibodies is specified, to indicate how many people are ever likely to have had the infection.
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The sample for the survey is drawn mainly from the Annual Population Survey (APS), which consists collectively of those who successfully completed the last wave of the Labor Force Survey (LFS) or local LFS boost, and who have consented to future contact regarding research. Additionally, adults over 16 years old surveyed are asked to provide a blood sample, which is used to test for the presence of antibodies to COVID-19.
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Countering COVID-19: A European Survey on Acceptability and Commitment to Preventive Measures
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The survey is covering over 7.500 individuals that are representative of the population in seven European countries with respect to region, age, gender and education. The fieldwork took place from April 2 to April 15 using an online questionnaire addressing such issues as people’s risk perceptions, support of containment policies, trust in information, worries, vaccination attitudes, and prevention behavior in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Within this project, the survey will be conducted again twice in May and in June.
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COVID Inequality Project
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The project is documenting the impact of the pandemic on workers. It is particularly interested in understanding how the outbreak of COVID-19 and government policies are impacting inequality across many dimensions, such as age, gender, occupation, work arrangements, and education.
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Already two survey waves were launched (N > 20.000) collecting responses from large geographically representative samples in the US and UK and one survey wave in Germany. The goal is to inform the policy, academic, and public community about the impact of these dramatic developments and the recovery on different groups of society.
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#13183
Inequality in the Impact of the Coronavirus Shock: Evidence from Real Time Surveys
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#15307
Perceived Returns to Job Search
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#14808
The Value of Sick Pay
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#13965
When the Great Equalizer Shuts Down: Schools, Peers, and Parents in Pandemic Times
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#13374
Work That Can Be Done from Home: Evidence on Variation within and across Occupations and Industries
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#13183
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COVID-19 and Inequality - Survey Program
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The surveys focus on the social and political consequences of the coronavirus crisis and cover multiple topics, such as the perceived individual and social consequences of the pandemic and the measures taken to contain it, trust in health and social policy and the welfare state, support for government aid given to businesses, gender inequalities, questions of solidarity within the EU, opinions on the "Corona app", on debates about loosening the emergency measures, and on perceived infection risks in the working place. The surveys combine the latest research about the highly unusual pandemic-induced situation with a wider range of interdisciplinary questions that are at the core of the Cluster's long-term agenda.
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COVID-19 and Mental Health
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The University of Glasgow is leading a new study, into the mental health and wellbeing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in adults across the UK.
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COVID-19 and Remote Work
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19To get a real-time sense of how firms and workers are adapting to the COVID-19 pandemic the researchers conducted a nationally-representative sample of the US population using Google Consumer Surveys (GCS) on working practices. The survey was launched on April 1, 2020 and collected responses until April 5, collecting a total of 25.000 responses asking a single question: "Have you started to work from home in the last 4 weeks?"
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COVID-19 Data from the CPS
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Starting in May 2020, a series of questions were added to the Current Population Survey related to the COVID-19 Coronavirus pandemic. The first 4 questions concerned how an individual’s labor force characteristics may have been caused by the pandemic. These questions will remain in CPS for the foreseeable future. A fifth set of questions captured whether the pandemic caused anyone in the household to need medical care for something other than Coronavirus, but not get it because of the pandemic. These questions will be (were) dropped from the CPS starting in November 2020.
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Show Related IZA Discussion Papers using this Data Resource 29-
#14182
Asian Discrimination in the Coronavirus Era: Implications for Business Formation and Survival
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#13334
COVID-19 Employment Status Impacts on Food Sector Workers
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#13827
COVID-19 School Closures and Parental Labor Supply in the United States
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#13282
COVID-19, Stay-At-Home Orders and Employment: Evidence from CPS Data
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#13802
Employment Opportunities and High School Completion during the COVID-19 Recession
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#14883
Fiscal Multipliers in the COVID-19 Recession
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#14223
From Mancession to Shecession: Women's Employment in Regular and Pandemic Recessions
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#15086
Has the Willingness to Work Fallen during the COVID Pandemic?
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#13643
Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic and the CARES Act on Earnings and Inequality
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#13443
Initial Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Employment and Hours of Self-Employed Coupled and Single Workers by Gender and Parental Status
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#13397
Lockdown Accounting
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#14408
Mothers' Caregiving during COVID: The Impact of Divorce Laws and Homeownership on Women's Labor Force Status
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#14166
Policies to Help the Working Class in the Aftermath of COVID-19: Lessons from the Great Recession
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#13277
The Adverse Effect of the COVID-19 Labor Market Shock on Immigrant Employment
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#14108
The COVID-19 Pandemic's Evolving Impacts on the Labor Market: Who's Been Hurt and What We Should Do
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#13266
The Distributional Impacts of Early Employment Losses from COVID-19
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#14272
The Effect of a Health and Economic Shock on the Gender, Ethnic and Racial Gap in Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from COVID-19
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#14811
The Evolving Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Gender Inequality in the U.S. Labor Market: The COVID Motherhood Penalty
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#13311
The Impact of COVID-19 on Small Business Owners: Evidence of Early-Stage Losses from the April 2020 Current Population Survey
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#13707
The Impact of COVID-19 on Small Business Owners: The First Three Months after Social-Distancing Restrictions
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#13264
The Impacts of COVID-19 on Minority Unemployment: First Evidence from April 2020 CPS Microdata
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#13532
The New Hazardous Jobs and Worker Reallocation
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#13159
The Short-Term Economic Consequences of COVID-19: Exposure to Disease, Remote Work and Government Response
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#15136
The Unemployed with Jobs and without Jobs
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#14454
UI Generosity and Job Acceptance: Effects of the 2020 CARES Act
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#13294
Unemployment Paths in a Pandemic Economy
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#15118
Who Is Doing the Chores and Childcare in Dual-Earner Couples during the COVID-19 Era of Working from Home?
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#13374
Work That Can Be Done from Home: Evidence on Variation within and across Occupations and Industries
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#14508
Young and Hungry? Employment Levels for Young People During Spring 2021
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#14182
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COVID-19 Impact on International Higher Education: Studies & Forecasts
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19An astonishing number of surveys, analyses, and forecasts on the possible COVID-19 impact on international higher education. The DAAD wants to provide a comprehensive overview of the current state of COVID-19 research and expertise in the field of international higher education.
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COVID-19 is Rapidly Changing: Examining Public Perceptions and Behaviors in Response to this Evolving Pandemic.
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The researchers conducted an online survey of Australian residents between 18 and 24 March 2020. Proportional quota sampling was used to ensure that respondents were demographically representative of the general public, with quotas based on age, gender and state/territory. Respondents were required to be 18 years or older and to speak English.
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Respondents were asked to rate the perceived level of effectiveness in reducing the risk from COVID-19. These items included those promoted by the government and those that were not (mask use when not symptomatic, taking antibiotics). The strategies were grouped into: hygiene related behaviors (hand washing/sanitizing, cleaning surfaces) and avoidance-related behaviors (avoiding crowds, public transport, and complying with quarantine restrictions). Included was also a question that assessed the respondent’s ability to adopt to different social distancing strategies (working from home, keeping children home from school, avoiding travelling, avoiding large crowds, quarantine if exposed, and isolation if symptomatic. The last section of the survey included items focused on self-isolation. Respondents were asked to comment on their willingness to comply, their level of concern regarding the impact on being placed into self-isolation (at home), their ability to comply, their access to assistance from family/friends and issues they have with the strategy.
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Covid-19 Safe Distance
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The data provides new evidence related to predictors of COVID-19 transmission. Specifically, it investigates work and personal predictors of transmission experience reported by to better understand possible transmission pathways and mechanisms in the community.
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The survey took place over the first week of June 2020 by electronic means (via phones or personal computers but not face-to-face meetings) using quota sampling to obtain a national sample broadly representative for those of working age with some oversampling to reflect contrasts of interest.
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COVID-19 Snapshot Monitoring (COSMO)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The aim of the project is to repeatedly get an insight into how the population perceives the corona pandemic: how the “psychological situation” is emerging. The aim is to to monitor public perceptions of risk, protective and preparedness behaviors, public trust, as well as knowledge and misinformation to enable government spokespeople, the media, and health organizations to implement adequate responses. The study design allows rapid and adaptive monitoring of these variables over time and assessing the relations between risk perceptions, knowledge and misinformation to preparedness and protective behavior regarding COVID-19 in Germany.
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The study participants are invited through an online panel provider. Every week, a representative distribution of the N = 1,000 respondents between the ages of 18-74 is selected based on the census data from Germany. Wave 1 interviewed 977 people. Quotations are made according to age / gender (crossed) and federal state (uncrossed).
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COVID-19 Transmission Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The dataset was developed by a survey that took place over the first week of June 2020. Samples of 1,000 adults in the US and UK were obtained from a professional survey company using quota sampling to obtain national samples broadly representative for those of working age with some oversampling to reflect contrasts of interest. All survey recruitment and completion was done by electronic means (so via phones or personal computers but not face-to-face meetings). Towards the end of the sampling period some of the quotas were relaxed. Ex post, a set of weights that can be used to construct nationally representative results. Respondents were paid a small amount for completing the survey which took about 5 minutes on average to complete. It is important to reiterate that survey responses are self reports and that said, overall reported infection rates are comparable to those reported elsewhere for the UK and US bearing in mind the predominance of early transmission experience.
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The dataset contains several variables related to transmission experience while the analysis focuses on the possession of a medical diagnosis or positive test self-reported by the respondent.
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COVID-19-Related Shocks in Rural India 2020
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The World Bank, IDinsight, and the Development Data Lab produced rigorous and responsive data for policymakers across six states in India: Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, and Madhya Pradesh.
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Data Sets for COVID-19 Research on Google Cloud Platform
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19In an effort to help combat COVID-19, Google created a COVID-19 Public Datasets program to make data more accessible to researchers, data scientists and analysts. The program will host a repository of public datasets that relate to the COVID-19 crisis and make them free to access and analyze. These include datasets from the New York Times, European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, Google, Global Health Data from the World Bank, and OpenStreetMap.
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Digitising Europe Pulse - European Resilience in Times of COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The survey was conducted by Kantar who have interviewed 13,000 people from 13 EU member states via an online survey for the Vodafone Institute for Society and Communications. The survey is the second edition of the “Digitizing Europe Pulse” series, which the Vodafone Institute is conducting on a quarterly basis. Main topics are: technical equipment and performance meeting the challenges with COVID-19, perceiving and managing measures taken by national governments, access to a digital infrastructure that helps to cope successfully with everyday life, acceptance of corona apps, COVID-19 crisis management of the national governments, inter-European cooperation and cohesion among Europeans, short-time work, quality of life in the long term
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DJI Childcare Study COVID-19 Add-on
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The survey has been supplemented by a short additional module on the effects of the corona virus on the care of children up to primary school age since the beginning of the corona pandemic. Parents already interviewed at this time were also asked about the current changes in the care of their children due to corona as part of a follow-up study. In addition to the deviation from the "usual" care situation, the support received in organising childcare as well as changes in the parents' working behaviour will be surveyed. Over the field period from the end of March to the end of July 2020, the overall course of the collected information can provide information on the extent of the changes over time and the flexibility that families have to provide as well as the stabilisation of the care situation in the following months.
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The DJI Childcare Study (KiBS) is an annual, representative survey of approx. 33,000 parents with children under the age of 12 years. Based on random samples from the residents' registration office, about 2,000 interviews are conducted in each federal state of Germany. The youngest age cohort, children under one year of age, is drawn each year anew, while the older children continue the panel survey. The parent principally caring for the child is interviewed; in more than 90 per cent of the interviews, this is the child's mother. The duration of a telephone interview (CATI) is about 20 minutes per person.
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ELSA COVID-19 Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The ELSA COVID-19 assessment protocol combines new COVID-19 questions with measures used in previous ELSA waves of data collection as detailed below. The study has also been collaborating with the Wellcome Trust initiative coordinating questionnaire content across other longitudinal studies, and with international colleagues who run longitudinal ageing studies similar to ELSA.
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Employment and Establishment
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Institute for Employment Research (IAB) is conducting a repeated special online survey on the corona pandemic investigating daily work routine, changes in working life, and existing uncertainties as part of the study “Employment and Establishment” (in German).
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Employment and Life Effects COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Central Statistics Office, Ireland introduced a special module of questions into the Labour Force Survey (LFS) for Q2 2020 to provide insight into the effects of COVID-19 on people’s employment situation and their general well-being.
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EUA Survey on Digitally Enhanced Learning and Teaching
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19This survey aims to map the situation regarding digitally enhanced learning and teaching at higher education institutions across Europe, regarding benefits, impact and challenges, and plans and strategies for the future. The survey was planned long before the coronavirus crisis started, but it also includes some questions on how higher education institutions are adapting to the changed situation.
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EUCLID-Project Risk Perceptions & Behavior in the Context of the Current Coronavirus Outbreak
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19In response to the ongoing public health emergency due to the Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2 and the associated disease COVID-19) outbreak worldwide, the University of Konstanz developed an online survey “EUCLID” to track: 1. Subjective health & symptoms, 2. Perceived risk & outbreak related perceptions, 3. Protection motivation & behavior, 4. Expected future developments of the current outbreak.
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The online panel (Prolific Academic), was conducted with social media (e.g. Facebook, Twitter), and email lists using a snowball system. Participation is voluntary and as compensation, participants could take part in a lottery. Data collection started February 02, 2020 as part of a student project.
The EUCLID study was carried out as part of the RiskDynamics (FOR 2374) research group funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) and the Center of Excellence Cluster for the Advanced Study of Collective Behavior at the University of Konstanz. The surveys are continued on an ongoing basis in 15 countries (July 2020).
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EUROFOUND Living, Working and COVID-19 Data
Open Access Full Texts Related to COVID-19Eurofound's e-survey, Living, working and COVID-19, to captures the most immediate changes during the pandemic and their impact, with the aim of helping to shape the response to this crisis. The survey looks at quality of life and well-being, with questions ranging from life satisfaction, happiness and optimism, to health and levels of trust in institutions. Respondents are also asked about their work situation, their work–life balance and level of teleworking during COVID-19. The survey also assesses the impact of the pandemic on people’s living conditions and financial situation.
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European Parliament COVID-19 Surveys
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The issues covered focus on an assessment of public measures against the pandemic and on the impact the pandemic has on various aspects of the personal lives of the respondents.
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This dataset [ZA7736] represents the first round of a survey among European citizens about their views on the coronavirus crisis (COVID-19 pandemic). Round 2 [ZA7737] was surveyed in June 2020, round 3 [ZA7738] was surveyed in September and October 2020. Some questions were fielded again in rounds 2 and 3.
Demography: sex; age; age at end of education; head of household; occupation; professional position; employment status; marital status; household composition and household size; region.
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European Skills and Jobs Survey COVID-19 and Labor Market
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Cedefop is designing the second wave of its European skills and jobs survey (ESJS). A second wave, in the first half of 2021, will address the ongoing policy debate about the impact of digitalisation on jobs and the nature of work, as well as heightened concerns about what may be a long-term effect of the coronavirus crisis on EU jobs and skills.
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The new ESJS will collect comparative information from EU Member States on the impact of technological change and digitalisation on workers’ job tasks and skill mismatch, and their readiness to adapt by investing in online learning.
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First Insights into the Quality of Homeschooling
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Parents and their school-age children and adolescents have been facing home schooling for over two months. Even if there are currently easements, these only affect selected grades and the lessons are still very reduced and predominantly at home.
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Scientists from the Universities of Dortmund and Marburg are conducting a study on the quality of home schooling which has a focus on the following topics: organisation and quality of homeschooling, school subjects, technical options for online lessons, frequency of lessons via video conference, personal contact between teachers and the children and communication means. First results are published in German.
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Fraunhofer Coronavirus Home Office Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19On April 1, 2020, the Fraunhofer FIT started a home office survey. The aim is to find out how employees experience the situation and analyze where there is room for improvement in the future. Changes in time and learning processes over the duration should also be considered. First results have been published (in German).
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GALLOP World poll
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Gallup World Poll consists of more than 100 global questions as well as region-specific items. It includes the following global indexes: law and order, food and shelter, institutions and infrastructure, good jobs, wellbeing, and brain gain.
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Gender Inequality in COVID-19 Times
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19It is a survey on approximately 1,500 UK respondents in Prolific, an online platform that connects researchers with participants, who get paid cash for taking part in research. Conditional on participating in the survey, the sample is representative of the UK population with regards age, sex and ethnicity. The survey was launched on 19 June 2020, three months after the beginning of the lockdown on the 23 March 2020, and the focus is on well-being, perceptions and behaviors in COVID-19 times.
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GESIS Panel and Initiatives on COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The GESIS Panel offers researchers the opportunity to collect survey data on the current outbreak of the Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) in Germany via a fast-track procedure. Also, GESIS Panel special survey on the COVID-19 outbreak in Germany, and the planned GESIS Panel standard/extended version: longitudinal data on the COVID-19 outbreak in Germany.
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Ghana Socioeconomic Panel Survey – COVID Survey (GSPS COVID)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The GSPS-COVID survey asked multiple questions about the respondents’ perception of and compliance with the pandemic response measures implemented by the national government, and the economic and labour market impact that they had experienced (see Schotte et al., 2021 for a comprehensive overview). Concerning the latter, respondents were asked retrospectively about their household’s economic wellbeing and their own employment situation in February, April, and the seven days prior to the interview, which took place between 19 August and 17 September 2020.
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Global Behaviors and Perceptions in the COVID-19 Pandemic
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19An international team of researchers from 12 different institutions, including Harvard, Cambridge, IESE, and Warwick University, among others is collecting survey data on how citizens prepare and cope with the spreading COVID-19.
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Global COVID-19 Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Global COVID-19 Survey is being used for tracking, monitoring, and analyzing global socio-behavioral trends to inform the COVID-19 global response. The study is done by the Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Humanitarian Initiative. The purpose of this research is to analyze socio-behavioral aspects of outbreak control. The research will be used to inform national, regional and global health communication strategies and better inform response efforts. Participation in the online survey is voluntary.
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Haushaltskrisenbarometer
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The most comprehensive evaluation of the corona crisis from the perspective of individual households: The Haushaltskrisenbarometer (Household Crisis Barometer) is supported by a cooperation between the Leibniz Institute for Financial Market Research SAFE, Nielsen-Frankfurt and the Chair of Finance and Economics at Goethe University Frankfurt.
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The centerpiece is the evaluation of jointly developed questions that are answered every two weeks by the households of the Nielsen Consumer Panel. The high number of households surveyed continuously and the possibility of making the responses representative using statistical methods provide a reliable and timely picture of the economic situation, (consumption) behavior and expectations of the entire population. This is enriched by an insight into the actual purchasing behavior based on the purchases recorded for all households, and further background information.
The Nielsen Consumer Panel consists of around 20.000 households, of which around 16.000 are interviewed. These households have generally been members of the panel for years and submit all of their purchases in the Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) area every week.The inserted questions span a wide spectrum from the current economic situation to fears and expectations for the future (in German).
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Healthcare Workers Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Healthcare Workers Survey is a data collection tool designed to understand how the COVID-19 pandemic is affecting the well-being and health of healthcare workers. The survey will be conducted in several countries. Participants will be asked to answer a set of questions on demographic, well-being and working patterns. This includes questions that may be sensitive, including but not limited to questions related to COVID-19. The Healthcare Workers Survey is conducted by a team of researchers at the University of Cambridge, University of Exeter and University of Glasgow.
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High Frequency Mobile Phone Surveys of Households to Assess the Impacts of COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The World Bank and partners are monitoring the crisis and the socioeconomic impacts of COVID-19 through a series of high-frequency phone surveys, as countries move through the pandemic and into economic recovery.
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The surveys cover important topics including knowledge and concerns about the pandemic, access to food and other basic needs, employment and income loss, and safety nets and coping strategies.
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Household Pulse Survey from U.S. Census Bureau
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Household Pulse Survey (HPS), a nationally representative rapid response survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau and designed to measure the effects of the COVID-19 in the U.S. It was conducted weekly from April to July 2020 and then biweekly. The HPS contains information on the respondents' mental health and a plethora of demographic and socioeconomic information on responding households.
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IAB BerO Study
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The study focuses on professional orientation and counseling at the upper levels of general education schools and is intended to examine the individual professional orientation and the study and career choice behavior of high school students based on this.
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The baseline survey (wave 1) was conducted as a paper-and-pencil interview (PAPI) in 214 schools in 8 of 16 German federal states. Students completed the questionnaire in school between September and November 2019 and were instructed by a professional data collection team. The follow-ups took place outside the school context as a computer-assisted web or telephone interview (CAWI/CATI). Students were interviewed from February to June 2020 (wave 2) during the first wave of infection with some students answering before and others after school closures. Survey wave 3 took place from November to January 2021 during the second COVID-19 wave.
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IAB Linked Personnel Panel (LPP)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The COVID-19 add-on survey shows how the everyday work of employees in medium-sized and large private-sector companies has changed during the COVID-19 crisis. The survey is particularly about transitions to short-time work, changes in working hours and place of work, communication and the compatibility of work and private life. The survey is trying to address especially the following questions: how short-time work is used; how short-time work has changed; how many are currently working from home and to what extent; how do employees communicate with each other; how do work, family and childcare evolve?
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The basis of the current online survey is the IAB Linked Personnel Panel (LPP), which consists of a longitudinal survey of German private-sector companies with at least 50 employees subject to social security contributions and randomly selected employees in these companies. From early April to end of May 2020 IAB surveyed around 1,200 employees online about their daily work during the Corona crisis. A second wave started in early June 2020.
The information is representative of people who work in private companies with at least 50 employees and who use digital information and communication technologies for work. This applies to around 40 percent of employees subject to social security contributions in Germany.
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IAB-BAMF-SOEP COVID-19 Survey of Refugees (CSR)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The CSR is being developed as a telephone survey intended to capture the effects of the Corona-Crisis on refugees living in Germany. The survey will be administered to participants of the IAB-BAMF-SOEP COVID-19 Survey of Refugees, a longitudinal household survey of refugees who arrived in Germany between 2013 and 2016. The main survey will be fielded in August 2020 pending unforeseen delays. However, given the high demand for timely data on this vulnerable population, the cooperating institutions decided to carry out the CSR before the main survey. In addition to items about the physical and mental health of the respondent and household members, the CSR questionnaire includes items concerning changes to labor market participation and earnings, childcare, time use, social life, and wellbeing due to the lockdown measures. Respondents also receive questions related to changes in language course participation and participation in further educational activities.
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IAB/ZEW Start-Up-Panel Special Surveys
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19As part of the annual IAB/ZEW start-up panel - by the Institute for Employment Research (IAB, Nuremberg) and the ZEW – Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research, a special survey will be held this year on the effects of the corona pandemic. Crisis management is being analyzed for young companies to better understand the labor market effects of young companies and their possible problems on the labor market. The focus will deal with liquidity problems and consequences of statutory shutdowns. Important issues include not only the extent to which young companies take personnel measures, such as applying for short-time work benefits, reducing working hours, arranging home offices, etc. But also to what extent young companies were able to conquer market niches due to the corona pandemic. It is planned to repeat this survey in autumn 2020 to find out how the companies will develop.
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IAU Global Survey on the Impact of COVID-19 on Higher Education around the World
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The IAU Global Survey on the Impact of COVID-19 on Higher Education around the World was conducted online from 25 March to 17 April 2020. It received 576 replies from 424 universities and other Higher Education Institutions based in 111 countries and territories. The results of this survey are presented in a report. Results are analysed both at the global level and at the regional level in four regions of the world (the Americas, Asia Pacific and Europe).
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ifo Education Survey 2020
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The ifo Education Survey (e.g. ifo Education Barometer) is based on an annual public opinion survey. In 2020, over 10,000 individuals were interviewed, who constitute a representative sample of Germany’s adult population between 18 and 69 years. Also, 1,000 parents of schoolchildren on coronavirus-related school closures were part of the survey. The survey focused on education in the Coronavirus crisis: The time schoolchildren spend on school activities, educational measures Germans advocate, like compulsory online instruction, effects of school closures on digitization in education
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ifo Education Survey 2020 – Parent Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The sample of parents: From the total sample of the ifo Education Survey, which includes a representative sample of the adult population in Germany all parents of school children have been asked to answer questions for their youngest school child about activities during the time of the Corona related school closures.
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In this respect, this subsample is a "convenience sample" of parents of pupils at all general schools - elementary schools, secondary schools, junior high schools and comprehensive schools, grammar schools and other types of secondary schools -,due to the representativeness of the overall sample, and a good representation of the students at general education schools.
The parent survey includes a question about children's activities in the period before the school closures. The parent sample includes 1,099 parents of school children.
The first wave of the survey was conducted as part of a large education survey from 3 June to 1 July 2020. The second wave of the survey was in the field from 17 February to 10 March 2021.
Overall, 2,045 parents of children in schools were surveyed. In contrast to the first survey, the sample in the second survey was immediately restricted to parents, and quotas were again used to ensure representativeness along several dimensions including age, gender, state of residence, and education degree. A total of 513 respondents, equivalent to 47 percent of the original parent sample, were successfully recruited to participate again in the second wave. The sample allows to compare respondents’ answers in the first period of school closures and nearly one year later, and hence gain novel insights how individual families and schools adapted to the new realities brought on by the pandemic.
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ifo Employment Barometer
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The ifo Employment Barometer is based on ca. 9,500 monthly responses from businesses in manufacturing, construction, wholesaling, retailing and the services sector. The companies are asked to report on their employment plans for the coming three months.
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Imperial College London YouGov Covid-19 Behavior Tracker Data Hub
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19YouGov has partnered with the Institute of Global Health Innovation (IGHI) at Imperial College London to gather global insights on people’s behaviors in response to COVID-19. The research covers 29 countries, interviewing around 21,000 people each week.
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It is designed to provide behavioural analysis on how different populations are responding to the pandemic, helping public health bodies in their efforts to limit the impact of the disease. Anonymised respondent level data will be available for all public health and academic institutions globally.
The questions in the survey, led by IGHI, cover data on testing, symptoms, self-isolating in response to symptoms and the ability and willingness to self-isolate if needed. It also looks at behaviors, including going outdoors, working outside the home, contact with others, hand washing and the extent of compliance with 20 common preventative measures.
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IPSOS Vaccination Survey in Four Countries
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The survey was designed to be fielded by IPSOS/MORI using their Online Omnibus panel. The survey asked 4,313 residents of the Italy (n=1,051), Spain (n=1,079), the United Kingdom (UK) (n=1,098) and the United States (US) (n=1,085) about their personal experience, risk perceptions, behaviors, financial impacts from the pandemic and intention to vaccinate against COVID-19. The survey was run from 10 -14 July 2020. The sample is representative at the national level and is stratified. Income and education were collected using different scales in each country and standardised.
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Kaiser Family Foundation
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19COVID-19 tracker on policy analysis, polling, and state data on COVID-19.
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KiCo and JuCo: Surveys of Young People and Parents During the Corona Pandemic
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19KiCo
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Research teams from the Universities of Hildesheim and Frankfurt surveyed parents with children under the age of 15. The measures to contain the corona pandemic have changed the everyday life of many families to a considerable extent. How parents and their children feel about it, what their current well-being is, what characterizes their everyday life, how the fit with the rules of daycare, school opening and also employers are - these are the core questions of the online survey "KiCo", which in the Period from April 24th, 2020 - May 3rd, 2020. Over 25,000 people answered at least 95 percent of the questionnaire in this short time and took a lot of time with it.
JuCo
With the JuCo study, young people and young adults between the ages of 15 and 30 should be reached. It's about subjective assessments in various areas, but also about the collection of objective data such as technical equipment. Questions about the current experience at home and in the family, the handling of contact restrictions and satisfaction with it, and the prepandemic perception along the way were central for the survey. Also the following questions were depicted: What are the living conditions, what existential requirements for mastering the new life situation there is? What worries do young people have, and how do they continue to communicate with friends? Over 5,000 adolescents and young adults answered the questionnaire.
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KoCo19 - Project
Public Health and MedicineIt is planned to visit up to 3,000 representative selected households in the Munich area at different intervals for twelve months, to study the infection status of the study participants and to collect further health information. All household members over the age of 14 are interviewed in a personal interview and asked for a blood sample to determine antibodies against SARS-CoV-2. With current symptoms, a throat swab can also be performed. In addition, every household member can keep a symptom, stay and contact diary via app on a voluntary basis (in German).
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Libya High-Frequency Phone Survey Social Protection (HFS-SP)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Data have been collected by the LBSC using a phone-based data collection method.7 Calls were made to respondents resident in all the 22 Mantikas (regions) in Libya and the sample was constructed to resemble the population share of each Mantika in total population. The questionnaire - administered to the head of the household or any respondent older than 17 years old - included the following modules: (i) household roster; (ii) demographic, education, and spending information; (iii) employment; (iv) health status, disability, and cost of healthcare; (v) housing; (vi) household income, transfers, (vii) assets and debt; (viii) shocks and coping strategies; (ix) consumption.
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Life and Employment in Times of Corona
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Institute for Employment Research (IAB) is conducting a survey (N=200.000, 15 minutes) how the corona crisis is affecting the (working) life of people in Germany (in German).
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LISS Panel
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19To analyze changes in work arrangements, behaviors, beliefs and expectations dur-ing the COVID-19 crisis economists from the University of Bonn, IZA and the University of Tilburg surveyed around 5,500 individuals in the Netherlands from March 20-31. The researchers compared work arrangements at the onset of the crisis and shortly after social-distancing policies were implemented.
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#14382
Drivers of Working Hours and Household Income Dynamics during the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Case of the Netherlands
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#14180
Job Search during a Pandemic Recession: Survey Evidence from the Netherlands
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#13623
Labour Supply during Lockdown and a "New Normal": The Case of the Netherlands
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#13158
Labour Supply in the Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic: Empirical Evidence on Hours, Home Office, and Expectations
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#14266
The COVID-19 Pandemic and Mental Health: Disentangling Crucial Channels
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#14382
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Mannheim Corona Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Mannheim Corona Study is based on the methodology and infrastructure of the German Internet Panel (GIP). The interviewed panel members have regularly participated in the study for at least 18 months; some participants have been part of the GIP for 8 years already. This allows the Mannheim Corona Study to compare life in Germany before and since the outbreak. Daily reports starting end of March 2020. GIP data are available for scientific use.
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Mercer Global COVID-19 Surveys
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Mercer, an US human resources consulting firm, is conducting a global spot survey to capture and share business responses from companies around the world taken as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak. Data are collected and updated with new questions on a monthly basis.
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Report sections include the status of COVID-19 planning, impact on business performance, adaption to the COVID-19 business environment, upcoming salary reviews and workforce adjustments, expatriate-specific and business-traveler concerns and issues, details on post-travel quarantine or self-imposed isolation procedures, flexible working strategy, programs and policies, work organization, and employee engagement, guidance and support provided to employees, return to the workplace and flexing for the future.
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National Household Sample Survey - PNAD COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19This nationally-representative survey of Brazilian households aims at estimating the number of persons with symptoms associated with the flu syndrome and at following up the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in the Brazilian labor market. The sample is longitudinal, i.e., the households interviewed in the first month of data collection will remain in the sample along the next months, up to the end of the survey.
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The questionnaire is divided into two parts, one directed to health issues, specifically on symptoms associated with the flu syndrome, and the other, to labor issues. The labor issues aim at ranking the population at working age in the following categories: employed, unemployed and persons out of the workforce. The following aspects are also investigated: employment and activity; work leave and reason for leaving; home office; search for work; reason for not searching for work; weekly hours effectively and usually worked; employment status and one-digit occupations, as well as the effective and usual earnings from labor.
The questionnaire is subject to changes along the application period. The survey releases some indicators on a weekly basis, at Brazil level, and a wider set of indicators on a monthly basis, for Federation Units.
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NEPS Research on COVID-19 and Education
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19As part of the NEPS (National Educational Panel Study), the largest long-term education study in Germany, all participants are being interviewed on the occasion of the corona pandemic. In the current as well as all future surveys the researchers want to determine the current experiences and impressions of the NEPS participants in times of the corona crisis and thus make them useful for educational research.
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The focus is on questions about people's everyday lives in school, work and family: How have you been doing since the outbreak of the corona pandemic? How has your everyday life changed? What are you worried about? What has perhaps also developed positively?
All data collected in this way can be used to obtain a differentiated picture of the corona effects on the educational biographies of the respondents (in German).
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Nigeria COVID-19 National Longitudinal Phone Survey (COVID-19 NLPS)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The objective of Nigeria COVID-19 NLPS is to monitor the socio-economic effects of this evolving COVID-19 pandemic in real time. These data will contribute to filling critical gaps in information that could be used by the Nigerian government and stakeholders to help design policies to mitigate the negative impacts on its population. The Nigeria COVID-19 NLPS is designed to accommodate the evolving nature of the crises, including revision of the questionnaire on a monthly basis.
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NIH Repository of COVID-19 Research Tools
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19This page provides a list of COVID-19 related measurement protocols (CRFs, DCFs, instruments, surveys, questionnaires) that are currently in use. The creators hope that investigators will consider choosing from these protocols rather than developing new ones. The source of each protocol has been verified and contact information is provided in case additional information is needed.
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On the Stability of Risk Preferences: Measurement Matters
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The data were collected at universities in different countries (Czechia, India, Mexico, and Spain) as part of a research project on language learning and migration intentions among university students. During the baseline survey, collected in 2019, prior to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, respondents were requested a permission to be contacted again for a follow-up survey, which took place in December 2020 and January 2021. The sample was restricted to countries with at least 20 respondents in the follow-up survey.
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In both waves, the same two measures for risk attitudes were collected: self-assessed willingness to take risks (“stated willingness to take risks”), and an incentivized lottery decision task (“elicited willingness to take risks”). To measure within-individual variation in willingness to take risks, the sample was restricted to those respondents with information on both measures in both surveys who were still students at the time of the follow-up survey. The estimation sample consists of 303 individuals with information on risk preferences from 9 universities in Czechia, India, Mexico, and Spain; the share of women in the sample is 57% and the median age is 21 years.
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Open ICPSR's COVID-19 Data Repository
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) has launched a repository of data examining the impact of the novel coronavirus global pandemic. This repository is a free, self-publishing option for researchers to share COVID-19 related data.
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OSF Coronavirus Outbreak Research Collection
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19OSF is a free, open source web application that connects and supports the research community. Researchers use OSF to collaborate, document, archive, share, and register research projects, materials, and data on COVID-19 across disciplines.
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Oxford Supertracker - The Global Directory for COVID Policy Trackers and Surveys
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Oxford COVID-19 ‘Supertracker’ is a ‘precious compass to help policy-makers' around the world, according to leading international institutions.
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Numerous organizations have produced trackers to allow policy-makers and stakeholders to follow and evaluate policy changes and their impact on the pandemic in the UK, Europe and across the world. The Oxford ‘Supertracker’ project makes this information freely available with one tool, allowing users to search and identify international policy.
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pairfam COVID-19 Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The pairfam project team initiated an additional study to collect data on the consequences of COVID-19 on family life. This data will enable an examination of the implications of the pandemic on family life, and it can be matched with the regular pairfam data for longitudinal analysis.
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The pairfam COVID-19 survey covers topics such as changes in occupational status and income, division of house work, relationship quality (e.g., intimacy, conflict), wellbeing (e.g., stress, loneliness, depressiveness), parent-child contact in stepfamilies, child schooling and screen time, strain in the parenting role, and family climate. This survey was designed as a computer assisted web interview of 15-minutes length and was scheduled for mid-May to June 2020.
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Parents During the Corona Crisis
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19A comprehensive overview on the combined effects of the corona crisis on parents, childcare, the labor market and the perspective of partners, has so far been lacking. The study ties in here and examines the effects of the Corona crisis on parents, taking into account both the family and the world of work. It closes a gap in current research on the Corona crisis.
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The study gives an overview of the magnitudes of parent groups affected by the closure of day-nurseries and schools and the changes in the labor market in the months of the lockdown. Four topics that achieved relevance during the crisis are also examined in more detail: parents in systemically relevant professions, working from home as a solution, division of labor between women and men, psychological consequences of the crisis for parents.
The study is based on special evaluations of the latest Microcensus from the German Federal Statistical Office (2018) and on a few special questions injected in German Internet Panel for the Mannheim Corona Study (in German).
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Perceptions of the Adult US Population Regarding the Novel Coronavirus Outbreak
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Data were collected using an online survey in early February 2020. Researchers asked participants to rank who they felt should lead the US response to COVID-19. Options included the President, Congress, the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the Director for the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In addition, participants completed a perceived risk scale which had 10 survey-items. Participants were also asked about their support for restrictive infection prevention policies and the reliability of various sources of information.
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The sample consisted of 718 adults and was similar to the US population in terms of age, gender, race, ethnicity, and education. The findings may be influenced by possible selection bias because participants needed a CloudResearch account and access to smartphone/computer to participate.
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Politbarometer-Extra for Corona May 2020
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The "Politbarometer" surveys are performed since 1977 at about monthly intervals by the Forschungsgruppe Wahlen (Institute for election research) for the ZDF (Second German TV network).
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They are intended to poll the opinions and attitudes of eligible Germans with regard to current events and issues as well as to political parties and individual politicians.The data from all polls per year is integrated, documented and archived in one cumulative data record at the GESIS Archive.
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RatSWD Collection on COVID-19 Surveys
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Surveys with projects and surveys on the effects of COVID-19 corona pandemic (in German).
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Real-Time Population Survey (RPS)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The core of the Real-Time Population Survey (RPS) online survey closely follows the core labor market questions in the BLS’s primary household survey, the Current Population Survey (CPS). Because it closely follows the CPS, it is possible to compute labor market estimates consistent with the government measures. This means that the results can be viewed as real-time predictions of the official government statistics, except available up to six weeks ahead of time and updated twice as often. This is one of the key distinctive features compared to other recent studies using online surveys to gauge the state of the US labor market.
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Risk Perception of COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19An international survey to measure risk perception of COVID-19, and the influence of communications on that. The purpose of the study is to use this unique opportunity to assess the risk perception and associated behaviors of people across different countries to the current COVID-19 pandemic.
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People were surveyed in 10 different countries around the world (United Kingdom, United States, Australia, Germany, Spain, Italy, Sweden, Mexico, Japan, and South Korea). These countries were chosen for their cultural and geographic diversity and to represent countries at different stages of the pandemic, with different government policies. Data collection took place between mid-March and mid-April 2020. Participants were recruited through several different (online) platforms or agencies with ationally representative quota samples of the US and UK stratified by age, gender, and ethnicity. Also interlocking age and gender quotas were employed in all other countries to ensure broadly representative samples, with a target of 700 participants per country. The survey was conducted in a web browser via Qualtrics and took about 20 minutes to complete. Participants were paid £0.80-£2.05 ($1.00-$2.57), varying between countries. Participants completed the surveys in their native local language. Translators were fluent in both English as well as each local language to help ensure appropriate adaptation of the survey items in each country.
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Roper Center: Supporting Public Opinion Data Related to COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, located at Cornell University, is the world’s leading archive of public opinion survey data. Among others, the Center’s mission is to collect, preserve, and disseminate public opinion data on COVID-19 for the research community and the interested public.
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Science Barometer Special Edition on Corona
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19How important are research results for people in times of the Corona pandemic? According to the public, what role should science play in politics when dealing with Corona? Do citizens feel well informed about Corona?
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The science barometer on Corona is a special edition of the science barometer annually published by Wissenschaft im Dialog. The representative population survey gathers and publishes annual data on public attitudes towards science and research in Germany. The results of the science barometer Corona special edition are based on 1,009 telephone interviews which were conducted on 15 and 16 April 2020 by Kantar on behalf of Wissenschaft im Dialog.
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SEAN COVID-19 Survey Archive
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19This searchable, open-access archive houses probability-based surveys on the COVID-19 pandemic conducted in the United States and internationally. Source materials are available via the open-access SEAN COVID-19 Survey Archive, with full-text search and retrieval of individual questions and related materials.
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The archive contains more than 350 surveys from the United States and 35 other countries (July 2020), It supports the Societal Experts Action Network (SEAN), an expert group convened by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, in collaboration with the National Science Foundation, to connect policymakers, researchers and the public with critical social, behavioral and economic inquiry relating to the pandemic.
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SHARE's COVID-19 Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The data collected with this questionnaire will allow examining in depth how the risk group of the older individuals is coping with the health-related and socioeconomic impact of COVID-19. The great advantage of these data will be the possibility to measure and interpret differences in a cross-country and a longitudinal dimension.
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Six-Country Survey on COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Representative evidence from China, Japan, Korea, Italy, the UK and the US on exposure, behavioral response, economic impacts and beliefs relating to the Covid-19 pandemic.
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#13352
Does the COVID-19 Pandemic Disproportionately Affect the Poor? Evidence from a Six-Country Survey
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#13824
Gender Inequality during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Income, Expenditure, Savings, and Job Loss
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#13816
Inequality and Support for Government Responses to COVID-19
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#13230
Six-Country Survey on COVID-19
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#13333
Socio-Demographic Factors Associated with Self-Protecting Behavior during the COVID-19 Pandemic
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#13366
Unequal Consequences of COVID-19 across Age and Income: Representative Evidence from Six Countries
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#13352
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Social Attitudes and Psychological Health in COVID-19 Pandemic Health Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Social Attitudes and Psychological Health in COVID-19 Pandemic Health Survey was administered in March 6-12, 2020, to a population of adults 16 years and older, residing in 31 provinces, municipalities, or autonomous regions of China with 1,952 responses. In addition to recording demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, the survey collected data on COVID-19 related psychological responses, social attitudes, self-assessed health, and mental health measures (life satisfaction, happiness, and depression).
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Social Impact of COVID-19 Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Social Impact of COVID-19 survey from the Central Statistics Office, Ireland was undertaken to measure the impact COVID-19 has had on Irish society in April 2020. This survey includes such topics as personal well-being, personal concerns related to COVID-19, changes in consumption behaviour and working life since the onset of the COVID-19 crisis.
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Socio-Economic Impact of COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Socio-Economic Impact (SEI) project focuses on data collection to support research on the short- and medium-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and related (de)confinement measures in Luxembourg on individuals and their households in terms of work and living conditions, daily activities and mobility, and (not directly COVID-19 related) health and health behaviours. To that purpose, a large-scale survey has been developed which forms the basis for monitoring the impact of the outbreak and associated policy measures on (a) work and living conditions, (b) daily activities and mobility, (c) time use and household interactions and (d) health and health behaviours.
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Phase 2 of the large-scale survey that was launched in March 2021 and examines the long-term effects of the crisis. Similar to the Phase 1 previous survey launched, this large online survey is aimed at all residents in Luxembourg aged 16 and over, whether they are workers, students, retirees, high school students. The survey is also accessible to cross-border workers, who have also been affected by this crisis. The survey covers health (physical and mental), employment and working patterns, daily activities, mobility, family interactions, etc.
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SOEP-CoV
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19A sample of more than 12,000 people has been interviewed by telephone for SOEP-CoV since the beginning of April. A second survey will take place if the infection rate has decreased significantly. The starting point for the surveys is the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). The samples are surveyed every two weeks (samples 1 to 5) or every week (samples 5 to 9) in order to record the chronological course of the crisis and the associated effects on private households. A total of 12,000 households were asked to participate in the "SOEP-CoV" study. At the beginning of the study, more households are surveyed than towards the end. With this design, the scientists take into account the assumption that the effects of the crisis are likely to be more severe at the beginning and to decrease over time (in German).
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Standard Eurobarometer 93 - Summer 2020: The EU and the Coronavirus Outbreak
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19he survey addresses topics such as: • the political and economic situation in Europe • how Europeans perceive their political institutions (both national governments/parliaments and the EU institutions) • attitudes to European citizenship and other key policy areas • perceptions of the coronavirus pandemic and its consequences.
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Survey of Acceptability of App-Based Contact Tracing in the UK, US, France, Germany and Italy
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The research project conducted a multi-country, large-scale (N = 5.995) study to measure public support for digital contact tracing of COVID-19 infections. The study measured intentions to use a contact-tracing app across different installation regimes (voluntary installation vs. automatic installation by mobile phone providers), and studied how these intentions vary across individuals and countries.
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Survey Research Methods During the COVID-19 Crisis
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19SRM presents a special issue on survey research during the COViD-19. The issue collects four types of papers: (1) Commentaries about ongoing research using surveys, or related methods. (2) Proposals of designs to study Coronavirus-related questions using survey research, (3) New research initiatives related to the pandemic that already started. (4) Descriptions of the adaptation of ongoing surveys (PSID, Share, Understanding Society, etc.) to the lockdown policies. In order to allow a swift publication of the papers, SRM changed its standard reviewing process and suspended the possibility for a revise and resubmit for papers that could make it into the issue with more rounds of revisions. The papers are considered to be contributions to ongoing debates instead of decisive research papers. Therefore they are published together with commentaries by peers, and sometimes with responses by the authors of the main article.
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The Consequences of the Coronavirus Pandemic for Inequality in Israel
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The initial population of the longitudinal survey is made of adult Israeli men and women (age 18+), who were employed or self-employed in the first week of March, prior to the lockdown of the economy. The survey is not a probability sample of the population as only those registered with the panel can be sampled, though it is a sample of the panelist, stratified by age, gender, geographical region, and religiosity.
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This first wave includes information on employment and job characteristics of Israeli households in the first week of March (before the economic downturn) and in the last week of April (after the economy was shut down, but before it was reopened). In the second wave, the information on employment and job characteristics of the original population was updated to June, and in wave 3 to August. Wave 4 was launched to capture changes in employment (paid and unpaid) patterns due to the second lockdown in Israel, which was started on September 2020.
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The COPSY-Study
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The COPSY study examines the effects and consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and adolescents in Germany. An additional goal of the COPSY study is to identify influencing factors that promote the mental health of children and adolescents in this crisis situation. From this, recommendations and strategies for prevention and intervention measures are to be derived promoting the mental health of children and adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the nationwide COPSY study, an extensive online survey on the mental health of children and adolescents and their families is carried out. A total of 1,000 11 to 17 year old children and adolescents as well as 1,500 parents of 7 to 17 children and adolescents are interviewed. The online questionnaire includes questions about how children deal with the crisis situation, questions about school, friends and family, about psychological problems such as anxiety and depression and about psychosomatic complaints. The family environment, media consumption and eating habits are also examined (in German).
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The COVID-19 Household Impact Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The COVID-19 Household Impact Survey is a philanthropic effort to provide national and regional statistics about physical health, mental health, economic security, and social dynamics in the United States from the US Data Foundation.
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The Covid19 Impact Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Covid19 Impact survey is assessing citizens feedback on four areas related to the COVID-19 pandemic in Spain: social contact behavior, financial impact, working situation and health status. A total of 24 questions cover the areas of demographics, their home situation, social contact behavior, personal economic impact, their workplace situation and their health. The survey was responded to by 156,614 participants between the evening of March 28th and April 2nd, 2020.
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The French SAPRIS Project
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The SAPRIS project is a longitudinal general population survey designed to identify the epidemiological and social issues of the coronavirus public health crisis in France. It draws on the national general population cohorts, comprising a total of over 200,000 persons.
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Research focuses include the incidence of COVID-19 symptoms and other health problems; whether or not people seek medical care; risk perception; the effects of infection prevention measures on daily life, social relations, and work; and trust in public and scientific recommendations. The impact of lockdown on children will also be studied, in terms of its effects on parent-child relations and leisure activities, particularly screen use; as well as home schooling conditions and children’s overall well-being in a situation of confinement (in French).
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The Global Covid-19 Student Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Global COVID-19 Student Survey aims to provide data on a population that has been profoundly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic: university students. The survey asks current students: how their educational experiences have been affected in spring 2020, how their housing situation has changed and potentially affected their studies, what their intentions are for study in Fall 2020, how their job market prospects have changed as a result of the pandemic, how their expectations about future job market success and job priorities have changed, what are their perceptions of the pandemic are and their preferences over risk, time, and trust.
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The Life with Corona Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The Life with Corona survey is a global online survey launched on 23 March 2020. The questionnaire covers three broad research areas — livelihoods and well-being; norms, trust and politics; and public health and pandemic exposure — as well as basic socioeconomic information on respondents. The survey was initially launched in German and English, and has now been translated into 21 additional languages. Using online snowball sampling, people from around the world participated in the survey by visiting the survey platform and completing the questionnaire. The data will be made available for academic non-profit analyses. (IZA DP 13386)
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#13386
Trust in the Time of Corona
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#13386
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The Singapore Life Panel
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19Each month, an active panel of 11,000 Singaporeans aged 50 to 70 years (couples and single people) are asked questions about their income, expenditure, health, work and housing choices.
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The panel allows to study COVID-19 impact on household consumption spending and labor market outcomes jointly. And to investigate how and why COVID-19 has affected these outcomes through rich information on individual characteristics such as risk avoidance behavior, saving, perceived economic uncertainty, and chronic health conditions,
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UK Time-Use Diary Survey: The Click and Drag Diary Instrument (CaDDI)
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19In 2016 the Centre for Time Use Research has developed a new online Click and Drag Diary Instrument (CaDDI), collecting population-representative (quota sample) from a market research panel across 9 developed countries including the UK and the USA. They have fielded the same instrument with a similar UK sample, in May-June 2020 -at the peak period of lockdown-, providing a real-time comparison with 2016 behavior. Diaries were collected on 2 or 3 days per respondent (including one weekday and one weekend day), yielding approximately 1,000 diaries in each survey. Response quality was comparable to other on-line diaries, with a mean of 17 distinct episodes recorded each day, and with unusually low levels of missing primary activity,location and co-presence data.
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Understanding America Study
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19This page provides a summary of information and data from Understanding America Study surveys of attitudes and behaviors around the Novel Coronavirus pandemic in the United States. Currently two surveys are conducted, the UAS Understanding Coronavirus in America (“Covid”) Survey which includes a national bi-weekly long-form survey and a weekly Los Angeles County short-form survey. Reports, toplines, data, and documentation are provided for the full Wave 1 of the UAS Covid survey. Complete data sets for subsequent waves of the long, bi-weekly (national) and short, weekly (Los Angeles County) tracking surveys are posted here as they are completed.
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Understanding Society: COVID-19 Study
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19From April 2020 participants from the main Understanding Society (UK Household Longitudinal Study UKHLS) sample have been asked to complete a short web-survey (telephone version if internet not available). This survey covers the changing impact of the pandemic on the welfare of UK individuals, families and wider communities. Participants complete one survey a month, which includes core content designed to track changes, alongside variable content adapted each month as the coronavirus situation develops. Each survey takes around 20 minutes to complete.
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The survey forms an integral part of Understanding Society, a representative sample of UK households, with boost samples of Black and minority ethnic groups. Researchers can link data from the COVID-19 survey to answers respondents have given in past (and future) waves of the annual survey.
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#13503
COVID-19 and Mental Health Deterioration among BAME Groups in the UK
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#14388
COVID-19 and Mental Health of Individuals with Different Personalities
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#14665
Have Girls Been Left behind during the COVID-19 Pandemic? Gender Differences in Pandemic Effects on Children's Mental Wellbeing
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#14000
Labour Market Shocks during the COVID-19 Pandemic, Inequalities and Child Outcomes
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#14582
Search and Reallocation in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Evidence from the UK
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#14216
Testing the Differential Impact of COVID-19 on Self-Employed Women and Men in the United Kingdom
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#14790
The COVID-19 Pandemic and Its Impact on Socioeconomic Inequality in Psychological Distress in the UK: An Update
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#14826
The Psychological Gains from COVID-19 Vaccination: Who Benefits the Most?
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#13910
Unmet Health Care Need and Income-Related Horizontal Equity in Access during the COVID-19 Pandemic
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#14119
Weather, Psychological Wellbeing and Mobility during the First Wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic
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#13720
Who is Resilient in a Time of Crisis? The Importance of Financial and Non-Financial Resources
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#13762
Work, Care and Gender during the COVID-19 Crisis
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#13588
Working Parents, Financial Insecurity, and Child-Care: Mental Health in the Time of COVID-19
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#13503
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University College London (UCL) COVID-19 Social Study
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The UCL COVID-19 Social Study is a large panel study of the psychological and social experiences of over 75,000 adults (aged 18+) in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study commenced on 21st March 2020 and involves online weekly data collection from participants for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK. The study is not random and therefore is not representative of the UK population. But it does contain a well-stratified sample that was recruited using three primary approaches. First, snowballing was used, including promoting the study through existing networks and mailing lists (including large databases of adults who had previously consented to be involved in health research across the UK), print and digital media coverage, and social media. Second, more targeted recruitment was undertaken focusing on (i) individuals from a low-income background, (ii) individuals with no or few educational qualifications, and (iii) individuals who were unemployed. Third, the study was promoted via partnerships with third sector organizations to vulnerable groups, including adults with pre-existing mental health conditions, older adults, carers, and people experiencing domestic violence or abuse. The study was approved by the UCL Research Ethics Committee [12467/005] and all participants gave informed consent.
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WageIndicator Survey of Living and Working in Coronavirus Times
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The WageIndicator Foundation has launched a continuous global online survey ‘Living and Working in Corona Times’. The purpose of the survey is to discover what makes the Coronavirus lockdown easier (or tougher) for citizens across 110 countries, and to gauge the effect of COVID-19 on jobs, lives and states of mind.
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Why is this resource interesting?WageIndicator shows coronavirus-induced changes in living and working conditions in 110 countries. The survey reveals, from day to day, the consequences the large majority of the working population of the world experiences on the basis of answers on the following questions in the Corona survey:
- Is your work affected by the corona crisis?
- Are precautionary measures taken at the workplace?
- Do you have to work from home?
- Has your workload increased/decreased?
- Have you lost your job/work/assignments?
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WHO Tool for Behavioural Insights on COVID-19
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19A WHO tool for rapid, flexible and cost-effective monitoring of public knowledge, risk perceptions, behaviours and trust is now available to countries in the WHO European Region to make their COVID-19-related response relevant and actionable.
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World Bank COVID-19 follow up Enterprise Survey
Open Data and Surveys Related to COVID-19The World Bank has also released the Enterprise Survey follow-up survey data which measures the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on businesses. These surveys re-interview the respondents of recently completed ES to collect information about closures (temporary or permanent), changes in sales, employment, and finance, along with policy responses, expectations, and other topics.
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