Eurobarometer 43.0 and 43.1: Drug Abuse and AIDS, March - May, 1995
Keywords
FAMILIESPERFORMANCE
PRESCRIPTION DRUGS
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES (LEISURE)
STUDENTS
SELF-EMPLOYED
PENSIONS
RECRUITMENT
RELIGIOUS AFFILIATION
INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
DRUG CONTROL
SOCIAL ISOLATION
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
RELIGIOUS ATTENDANCE
HEALTH PROMOTION AND EDUCATION
MUSIC EVENTS
ECSTASY (DRUG)
EMPLOYMENT HISTORY
ECONOMIC ISSUES
HOUSEHOLDS
POLICE ACTIVITIES
CLUBS
SOCIAL SUPPORT
LOCATION
AGE
UNEARNED INCOME
Social attitudes and behaviour - Society and culture
DRUGS
CONDOM USE
SUICIDE
AIDS (DISEASE)
POLICE SERVICES
SELF-ESTEEM
FACILITIES
GENDER
SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS
SUPPLY
POLITICAL ATTITUDES
EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND
LIFE STYLES
SOLVENT ABUSE
PUBLIC INFORMATION
ASSAULT
MANUAL WORKERS
MEDICAL CENTRES
DRUG ADDICTION
TRANSMISSION OF DISEASE
MEDICAL RESEARCH
PERSONALITY DISORDERS
DANGEROUS MATERIALS
INFORMATION
CLINICAL TESTS AND MEASUREMENTS
INFORMATION SOURCES
TELEPHONE HELP LINES
ORGANIZATIONS
PHYSICIANS
SUPERVISORS
MARITAL STATUS
SELF-TESTING KITS (MEDICAL)
CANNABIS
COCAINE
HOLIDAYS
SOCIAL CLASS
HUMAN SETTLEMENT
International micro data - Major studies
HEROIN
UNEMPLOYED
SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR
DRUG EDUCATION
PEER-GROUP RELATIONSHIP
STEROID DRUGS
PARTNERSHIPS (PERSONAL)
SURGERY
LEGISLATION
ELECTORS
CHILDREN
BLOOD DONATION
RETIREMENT
OPIATE DRUGS
SICK PERSONS
NATIONALITY
CRIME
SEXUAL ABSTINENCE
EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
SOCIAL ISSUES
MANAGERS
INTERPERSONAL RELATIONS
INCOME
HALLUCINOGENIC DRUGS
DRUG ABUSE
RISK
MEDICAL CARE
EMPLOYEES
DRUG SIDE-EFFECTS
EMPLOYERS
STIMULANT DRUGS
SPORTS CLUBS
PROSTITUTION
MORAL PROBLEMS
330
NERVOUS BREAKDOWN
DOMESTIC RESPONSIBILITIES
HEALTH
FRIENDS
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
OCCUPATIONS
SOCIAL ATTITUDES
INVESTMENT RETURN
YOUTH
LSD (DRUG)
ADDICTION
BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS
PURCHASING
WAGES
SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR
DRUG TRAFFICKING
ATTITUDES
SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS
CONTRACEPTIVE DEVICES
Political behaviour and attitudes - Politics
PERSONAL HYGIENE
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http://purl.org/poi/iesr.ac.uk/1201881162-12776Abstract
The Eurobarometer (EB) survey series is a unique programme of cross-national and cross-temporal comparative social science research. Since the early seventies representative national samples in all European Union (EU) (formerly the European Community (EC)) member states have been simultaneously interviewed in the spring and autumn of each year. Starting with EB 34.1 (autumn 1990), separate supplementary surveys on special issues have been conducted under almost every EB number. The EB is designed to provide regular monitoring of public social and political attitudes in the EU through specific trend questions. More information about the series may be found on the Zentralarchiv fuer Empirische Sozialforschung (ZA - Central Archive for Empirical Social Research, University of Cologne) Eurobarometer Survey Series web pages. Background Work on European survey series began in early 1970, when the Commission of the European Community sponsored simultaneous surveys of the EC. These surveys were designed to measure public awareness of, and attitudes toward, the Common Market and other EC institutions, in complementary fashion. They also probed the goals given top priority for each respondent's nation. These concerns have remained a central part of the EC's research efforts - which were carried forward in the summer of 1971 with another six-nation survey that gave special attention to agricultural problems. The nine EC member countries were then surveyed again on the same topic areas in September 1973. After 1973, the surveys took on a somewhat broader scope in content as well as in geographical coverage, with measures of subjective satisfaction and the perceived quality of life becoming standard features of the EC public opinion surveys. Over time, the member states of the EC/EU have increased in number, and the coverage of the EB surveys has widened accordingly. In 1974, nine countries were surveyed: France, Germany, United Kingdom, Italy, Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, Ireland and Luxembourg. Greece has been included since the autumn 1980 survey (EB 14) onwards, Portugal and Spain since autumn 1985 (EB 24), the former German Democratic Republic since autumn 1990 (EB 34), Finland since the spring of 1993 (EB 39), and Sweden and Austria since the autumn of 1994 (EB 42). Norway has been included in some surveys since 1991, from EB 36 onwards. In 2004, the Czech Republic, Cyprus, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia joined the EU, and in 2007, Bulgaria and Romania (some of these countries participated in the Candidate Countries Eurobarometer survey series (see under GN 33343) before full accession). Some surveys are also conducted in Turkey, and in the Turkish Cypriot Community (Northern Cyprus). The Eurobarometer public opinion surveys are conducted on behalf of and co-ordinated by the European Commission, DG Press and Communication - Opinion Polls Sector (European Commission Public Opinion Analysis). Special topic modules are carried out at the request of the responsible EU Directorate General. Main Topics: This dataset merges responses to identical questions from two waves of Eurobarometer surveys, Eurobarometer 43.0 : Cross Border Purchases, Smoking Habits and Cancer Prevention, March - April 1995 (held at the Data Archive under SN:3810) and Eurobarometer 43.1 : International Trade and Radiation Protection, April - May 1995 (SN:3681). Topics covered by these surveys included drug use and AIDS. Questions on drugs related to drug usage, knowledge, attitudes to availability of drugs and ways to deal with the drug problem in society, including legislation. Questions on AIDS included attitudes to blood transfusion and donation, routes of disease transmission, attitudes to AIDS patients, efficacy of public health measures to combat the disease and methods of protection against sexual transmission of the virus. Demographic and other background information was gathered on the number of people residing in the home, size of locality, household income, and region of residence, as well as the respondent's age, sex, marital status, age when completed education, occupation, previous occupation, and left-right political self-placement. An extended sample of young people is included in this survey.Type
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oai:iesr.ac.uk:1201881162-12776http://purl.org/poi/iesr.ac.uk/1201881162-12776
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