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In this historical reenactment, Florence Nightingale uses applied statistics to disprove the medical assumptions of her day. Using fatality counts from the Crimean War, Nightingale develops a progressive series of statistical diagrams that reveal startling information: most soldiers did not die of their wounds, as reported, but in army hospitals, from diseases related to poor hygiene. When further data show army death rates twice that of the civilian population, Nightingale traces the cause to overcrowded, disease-ridden barracks. Produced by the Open University. (25 minutes)



 
                

Item#: This title is currently not available.
Copyright date: ©1995



Part of the Series : Applied Statistics
     


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Polling and Statistics

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The History of Computation: Wood, Brass, and Baboon Bones
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This program provides a fascinating survey of mathematical modeling through the ages-from scratch marks on early bone, to the ingenious Babbage Engine-forerunner of the modern computer. Primitive models include the early Greek sundial and astrolabe; ...(more details)
 
Modeling Animal Populations: Blue Haven

This program uses mathematical modeling to explore the concept of population equilibrium, using data gathered about the blue whale. Birth and death rate combinations charted on a line graph illustrate how each affects population equilibrium. Populati...(more details)
 
The Rainbow: Mathematical Modeling and the Study of Light

This program uses mathematical models to explain how light produces color in rainbows. Models developed by Aristotle, Newton, and others calculate the angle in which light travels. Bacon's model establishes the reflection of light at a fixed 42-degre...(more details)
 
Statistical Models in Medicine

In this program, statisticians in Barcelona use statistical models to trace the cause of asthma outbreaks. Data gathered from hospital admission records is placed on a time series clock, from which times, frequency, and general locations of outbreaks...(more details)
 


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