Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts
Part of Florence Nightingale — GCSE History
This memory aid covers Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts within Florence Nightingale for GCSE History. Revise Florence Nightingale in Medicine Through Time for GCSE History with 8 exam-style questions and 4 flashcards. This topic appears less often, but it can still be a useful differentiator on mixed-topic papers. It is section 10 of 13 in this topic. Use it for quick recall, then test yourself straight afterwards so the memory aid becomes usable in an answer.
Topic position
Section 10 of 13
Practice
8 questions
Recall
4 flashcards
🧠 Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts
The "SNAPS" framework for Nightingale's significance:
- S — Statistics: coxcomb diagrams proved 17,580 died from disease vs 4,077 from wounds
- N — Notes on Nursing (1859): first nursing textbook — codified the profession
- A — Administration: systematic cleaning, food supply, sewage disposal at Scutari
- P — Professional training: Nightingale Training School (1860) at St Thomas' Hospital
- S — Scutari death rate: 42% → 2% (the key statistic for this topic)
Key numbers to know cold:
- 42% → 2%: Death rate at Scutari before and after Nightingale's reforms
- 17,580: Soldiers who died from preventable disease in Crimea
- 4,077: Soldiers who died from wounds — far fewer than from disease
- 38: Number of nurses Nightingale took to Scutari
- 1854–56: Crimean War (Nightingale at Scutari)
- 1859: Notes on Nursing published
- 1860: Nightingale Training School founded (St Thomas' Hospital, London)
The "wrong theory, right practice" principle: Remember that Nightingale believed in miasma (bad air), not germs. She cleaned hospitals for the wrong scientific reason — but the right practical outcome. A good exam point: "Nightingale's reforms were effective despite her belief in the wrong theory of disease, because the practical measures that reduced bad air (ventilation, sewage disposal, cleanliness) also happened to reduce bacterial infection."
Visual association: Picture Nightingale not with a lamp but with a clipboard and a pie chart. She is standing before a large diagram showing a small wedge (battle wounds: 4,077) next to a huge wedge (preventable disease: 17,580). She is presenting this to a group of generals and politicians who look shocked. That image — data transforming policy — is the real Nightingale story.