The Healthy Ireland Survey is conducted annually, with a representative sample of the population aged 15 and older living in Ireland. The sample size is typically in the region of 7,400 - 7,500 people.
Fieldwork to date has been conducted on behalf of the Department of Health by Ipsos B&A.
The annual Survey gives an up-to-date picture of the health of the nation, reporting on many health-related lifestyle behaviours. This is the eighth set of findings and adds to the data collected in previous Healthy Ireland Surveys, published from 2015 – 2019 and 2021 - 2022.
The data from Healthy Ireland Surveys is used to underpin policy development and implementation, to monitor, measure and evaluate progress in implementing various elements of the Healthy Ireland Framework, as well as to meet international reporting obligations, including to the OECD, the EU and the WHO, and to provide information to researchers.
The Healthy Ireland Survey is aligned with Ireland’s Well-being Framework, launched in July 2021, which seeks to move beyond using just economic measures in gauging our progress as a country, by looking at economic, environmental and social issues together. The Framework focuses on quality of life, with a particular emphasis on equality and sustainability.
It consists of 11 dimensions which are made up of different aspects of well-being and is supported by a dashboard of 35 indicators which are available on the CSO website .
Detailed statistics and trends from the Healthy Ireland Survey 2015 - 2023 are available here on data.cso.ie .
The Healthy Ireland Survey 2023 Report includes data regarding smoking, alcohol and drug usage rates, mental health, social connectedness and suicide awareness, general health, antibiotic awareness and health service utilisation. A representative sample of people aged 15 and older living in Ireland were interviewed between October, 2022, and April, 2023
The main findings of the 2023 Healthy Ireland Survey are summarised below.
To note, due to its sensitivity, the module on suicide awareness was voluntary and completed by a minority of respondents in each Survey run in 2021-2023. This has the potential to create response bias as those for whom suicide resonates more strongly may have been more likely to take part in the module. Caution is therefore necessary in applying results to the overall population.