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How Florence Nightingale Changed Data Visualization Forever

The celebrated nurse improved public health through her groundbreaking use of graphic storytelling

DRAFT DIAGRAM
Surviving drafts of Nightingale's diagrams give a rare peek into her team's creative process. Drawn by government clerks, these drafts show how the team refined original ideas to improve information design. They also reveal that the mechanical precision of the final lithographs was not present in the original references. This early sketch gives a preview of one of Nightingale's most famous graphics (below), which reveals how army deaths from preventable diseases (blue) outnumbered hospital deaths from wounds (red).

British Library Imaging Services

In the summer of 1856 Florence Nightingale sailed home from war furious. As the nursing administrator of a sprawling British Army hospital network, she had witnessed thousands of sick soldiers endure agony in filthy wards. An entire fighting force had been effectively lost to disease and infection. The “horrors of war,” Nightingale realized, were inflicted by more than enemy bullets.

Nightingale had earned the moniker “Lady with the Lamp” by making night rounds on patients, illuminated by a paper lantern. She was serving in the Crimean War, where Britain fought alongside France against the Russian invasion of the Ottoman Empire. The causes of the soldiers' torment were numerous: incompetent officers, meager supplies, inadequate shelters, overcrowded hospitals and cruel medical practices.

Nightingale arrived back in London determined to prevent similar suffering from happening again. It would be an uphill slog. Many government leaders accepted the loss of common soldiers as inevitable. They wrongly believed, for example, that communicable diseases were caused by unavoidable realities—the weather, bad diet and harsh work conditions. And the poor quality of army data made it impossible to know exactly how soldiers died. Patient outcomes varied depending on whether you asked the officer who lost fighters, the ferryman who shuttled the sick, the doctor who treated invalids or the adjutant who buried bodies.


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FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE was photographed in London a few months after returning home from war. At around this same time, she began working with data and charts. Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Resolute, Nightingale set out to sway the minds of generals, medical officers and parliamentarians. Their poor data literacy muted statistical arguments that could have oriented them toward the facts. Nightingale, with her quantitative mind, had to persuade people with common understanding but uncommon standing. Her prime target throughout this effort was the head of the British Army, Queen Victoria.

With public attention drifting away from the concluded war, Nightingale knew that the opportunity for reform was fleeting. She worked 20-hour days, mostly behind the scenes, writing letters, wrangling data and publishing anonymously. She did not do it alone—a circle of experts, including statesmen, statisticians and scientists, united with her to break the policy makers' inertia and ineptitude. The team focused its campaign on promoting sanitary reform: fresh air, clean sewers and less crowding.

Nightingale's key persuasion tactic was to convey statistics in exciting ways. I recently conducted the first in-depth study of how Nightingale created and used data visualization, and I share my research in the forthcoming book Florence Nightingale, Mortality and Health Diagrams (Visionary Press). I studied correspondence that details Nightingale's information-design process, hand-drawn draft diagrams never before seen by the public and a complete catalog of her information graphics. We can now appreciate better than ever what an innovator Nightingale was and how her techniques foreshadowed how data graphics would become essential to public understanding and debate today.

Recognizing that few people actually read statistical tables, Nightingale and her team designed graphics to attract attention and engage readers in ways that other media could not. Their diagram designs evolved over two batches of publications, giving them opportunities to react to the efforts of other parties also jockeying for influence. These competitors buried stuffy graphic analysis inside thick books. In contrast, Nightingale packaged her charts in attractive slim folios, integrating diagrams with witty prose. Her charts were accessible and punchy. Instead of building complex arguments that required heavy work from the audience, she focused her narrative lens on specific claims. It was more than data visualization—it was data storytelling.

Nightingale's stories showcased how poor sanitation and overcrowding caused unnecessary death. She constructed her arguments from easy-to-understand comparisons. For instance, Nightingale brilliantly framed army mortality by contrasting it with civilian mortality. She showed how, for example, peacetime soldiers living in army barracks died at higher rates than civilian men of similar ages. Her graphics made it impossible to deny the realities represented by the data: army administration needed dramatic reform.

Nightingale's diagrams received broad coverage in the press. Within months after the first batch was published, the issue of overcrowded barracks was debated in both houses of Parliament, which moved to reform the sanitary conditions of the army. This resolution was backed by four subcommissions focused on sanitary construction, health codes, a military medical school and military statistics. Within a couple of years the quality of British Army data soared under the leadership of a Nightingale ally. The new data-collection operation—eventually lauded as the best in Europe—also proved the success of the sanitary reforms: mortality from preventable disease among soldiers declined to less than that in the comparable civilian population. Nightingale celebrated this milestone with a final Crimean War diagram, published in 1863.

Her campaign's biggest impact on civilian public health took another decade to materialize. The reforms Nightingale fought for were finally codified in the British Public Health Act of 1875. The legislation established requirements for well-built sewers, clean running water and regulated building codes. The law and the precedent it set worldwide would be driving forces—along with the development of vaccines that conferred immunity to diseases and artificial fertilizer that boosted crop yields—in doubling the average human life span during the following century.

CONTEXT

Nightingale's firsthand experiences in the Crimean War drove her passion for health reform. Here she leads a group on horseback to view the siege of Sevastopol (top left), the Crimean War's culminating conflict. Nightingale's graphics departed from the standard visualizations of the time, such as this black-and-white bar chart of soldier mortality (top right). In contrast, her charts (bottom) amplified the data story by comparing soldier (red) and civilian (black) mortality rates using horizontal bars, making the chart's labels easier to read. Nightingale's letters reveal that she was the one who designed the chart form, data and text.

Credit: Wellcome Collection; UCLA Library Special Collections, History & Special Collections for the Sciences; Internet Archive archive.org/details/b21365210 (clockwise from top)

DATA CRAFTWORK

Nightingale collaborated with physician and medical statistician William Farr on her first batch of diagrams. They included bar charts, area charts and circular diagrams. This diagram shows the British Army's monthly mortality rate across the war. The small circle at the center of the composition represents the mortality rate for similar groups in the city of Manchester, England, where living conditions and general health were poor at the time, which helped readers grasp the extreme mortality rate in the army.

Credit: UCLA Library Special Collections, History & Special Collections for the Sciences

HANDS-ON LEADER

The civilian data came from Farr's vaults at the General Register Office (GRO). The army data were assembled from half a dozen sources who had recorded deaths during the war. An extant army record indicates the nonstandardized data that Nightingale helped to wrangle. Farr's team of GRO clerks assisted with data analysis; they also drafted the diagrams. Nightingale managed and funded diagram lithography, printing and distribution. Her edits, which survive in correspondence and on diagram drafts, reveal a leader engaged with the project from conception through production. Although these first diagrams attracted attention, the circular diagrams contained a visual encoding flaw that caused large values to appear overexaggerated. Nightingale and her team corrected the mistake in their second batch of graphics.

Credit: Wellcome Collection

DATA STORYTELLING—THE PROBLEM

Nightingale's second batch of visualizations was her most stunning graphic achievement. The three-diagram set was originally issued in a confidential report to Queen Victoria. After the sanitation reformers were attacked in an anonymous pamphlet, Nightingale and her team repackaged the diagrams with a final rebuttal for public consumption. These graphics form a narrative that exposed the problem (too many deaths), revealed its cause (preventable disease) and offered lifesaving solutions (sanitary reform). The first diagram, shown here, emphasizes the problem by comparing the monthly rate of army mortality across two years (radiating wedges) with the average mortality rate in the city of Manchester (inner circle).

Credit: Harvard Library

DATA STORYTELLING—THE CAUSE

Nightingale's best-known diagram is this colorful depiction of causes of mortality, illustrated by overlapping wedges. Part of the chart's enduring success is attributable to its strange yet interesting form; others at the time presented similar data in conventional line graphs, to little effect. As the middle story element of her visual argument, it elevated two comparisons. The first shows that deaths from preventable diseases (blue) greatly outnumbered hospital deaths from wounds (red). The second comparison, repeated from the first diagram, is between the first year (right) and second year (left) of the war. It shows that mortality declined significantly between the two years, which are linked by a jagged line, and encourages readers to wonder what occurred to make such a difference.

Credit: Harvard Library

DATA STORYTELLING—THE SOLUTION

The third diagram completed the story by focusing attention on the moment when a team of sanitation engineers began fixing Nightingale's hospital. The mortality rate decreased greatly with the “commencement of sanitary improvements.” In her quest to highlight sanitary reform in this graphic, Nightingale left out other factors that probably played a role, including a reduction in hospital overcrowding and the end of a miserably cold winter. Furthermore, the sanitary improvements to the hospital did not magically happen in one day; they were the result of several months of work clearing filth, rebuilding sewers and installing ventilation flues. The radiant diagram is an information-design wonder: its wedge angles vary to accommodate the different record-collection periods for its source data.

Credit: Harvard Library

RJ Andrews is a professional data storyteller. He is editor of the Information Graphic Visionaries book series and author of its volume on Florence Nightingale. Visit VisionaryPress.com to learn more and follow him on Twitter @infowetrust

More by RJ Andrews
Scientific American Magazine Vol 327 Issue 2This article was originally published with the title “Florence Nightingale's Data Revolution” in Scientific American Magazine Vol. 327 No. 2 (), p. 78
doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0822-78