New survey aims to assess how covid pandemic impacted on the lives of people in Ireland

The Central Statistics Office is appealing to Cork people to take part in their short, online pulse survey entitled ‘Covid-19 — Our Lives Five Years On’.
New survey aims to assess how covid pandemic impacted on the lives of people in Ireland

People queue for the covid vaccine at the vaccination centre at City Hall, Cork, in August 2021. This March will mark five years since the onset of the pandemic, which severely affected lives across the world. Picture: Denis Minihane.

The CSO has launched a survey to assess how the covid pandemic changed the lives of Irish people.

March 2025 will mark five years since the threat of covid changed life for people in Ireland almost overnight.

The CSO is appealing to people to take part in their short, online pulse survey entitled ‘Covid-19 — Our Lives Five Years On’.

The survey aims to measure the impact of the changes that people and families experienced over that period.

This CSO survey goes live today and can be accessed via its social media channels and website. It is open to everyone aged 18 years and over living in Ireland.

The survey will close at midnight on February 3, and the results will be published in March, to coincide with the anniversary of the introduction of restrictions in Ireland in response to the pandemic.

Fiona O’Riordan, head of the CSO’s social data collection section, said: “In this survey, we ask you to tell us about how your life has changed in the last five years. Does widespread remote working impact on your job satisfaction, work-life balance, or your opportunities for promotion? Did school or college closures impact your or your children’s education and social development? Have your personal relationships been affected, or has your attitude to exercise or social media changed?”

Valuable insight

Ms O’Riordan said that by opting to take part in the short survey, the public will provide valuable insight into the impact of the pandemic on the lives of people in Ireland. 

The survey should take no longer than 10 minutes to complete, Ms O’Riordan said, and can be done on any type of device, including a mobile phone.

“Taking part in this pulse survey gives you the opportunity to add your voice to this important record of how we as a nation responded and dealt with the pandemic,” she added.

The last government previously said it will “evaluate” how Ireland handled the coronavirus pandemic rather than set up a statutory inquiry. Under the draft programme for government, published earlier this week, it said the incoming government will “support the work of the covid-19 inquiry”.

It also pledged to maintain the review of the model of care for long-covid, taking account of input from patient representatives.

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