Florence Nightingale didn’t need to worry about best practice

Florence Nightingale’s rose diagrams are one of the most famous and influential visualisations of all time. The story behind her and the creation of the charts is a fascinating one. I tell it in my “Influential visualisations talk”.

As part of the talk, I talk about how people criticise her diagrams for not being best practice. Phooey, I say to them. Why? For two reasons:

  1. She didn’t have the benefit of books and blogs about data viz best practice.
  2. She was trying to convey a simple message: soldiers were dying needlessly. The message was what counted to her.

I got to thinking, though, what would the charts look like using “best practice”? The answer: boring. Sure, they’re accurate, but they aren’t engaging. And it brings to mind something Andy Kirk and Alberto Cairo often talk about: while scientists tell us what to do, creatives tell us what we could do. Nightingale was a creative data rockstar.

So here are my attempts at reworking them. Do you think any of them are more effective at communicating the message than Nightingale’s?

area percent of total
Area chart as a percentage of total? Not bad. Lots of blue. But boring,
area line
Area chart of the numbers. I like this one, The text floats nicely and boy, there’s lots and lots of blue (avoidable deaths)
bar
Bar chart. Very effective and removes time from the view – many people argue that time is redundant in the originals. It’s not very engaging, though!
pie
Pie. Dare I admit I quite like this one? It really emphasises just how much blue (avoidable deaths) there are in relation to the whole.

As a final note – I concede I’m a little confused about whether Nigthingale’s originals were sized by area or by distance along the radius. Two great articles seem to contradict this (at least as far as my tired mind can interpret). One article that suggests the area is correct is on the excellent Understanding Uncertainty blog. Whereas Dynamic Diagrams thinks the area is incorrect.

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