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Posts by Fiona Spooner

Chart showing the causes of death globally in 2023. The data source is the IHME Global Burden of Disease (2025). Chart CC BY to Our World in Data

Chart showing the causes of death globally in 2023. The data source is the IHME Global Burden of Disease (2025). Chart CC BY to Our World in Data

On any average day, 165,000 people die globally. That’s 60 million a year.

What do they die from?

🔧📊 We built a new interactive tool that lets you answer this question, with data for every country.

Globally, 75% of deaths are from non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Heart disease alone is 1 in 3.

1 week ago 78 23 1 1

Our colleague needs your help keeping a 1,200-year dataset alive!

If you have botanical expertise or are based near Arashiyama, Kyoto — DM her or email tuna@ourworldindata.org.

1 week ago 99 65 2 3
Thefts in England and Wales are much less common than they were in the 1990s

Four small line charts showing estimated annual incidents from 1981 to 2025 from the Crime in England and Wales Survey (which interviews adults about their experiences of selected crimes in the 12 months before). Cover vehicle-related theft, domestic burglary, other household theft, and pickpocketing. Data source: Office for National Statistics (2025). Note: This data captures many incidents that were not reported to the police. The chart is licensed CC BY to Our World in Data.

Thefts in England and Wales are much less common than they were in the 1990s Four small line charts showing estimated annual incidents from 1981 to 2025 from the Crime in England and Wales Survey (which interviews adults about their experiences of selected crimes in the 12 months before). Cover vehicle-related theft, domestic burglary, other household theft, and pickpocketing. Data source: Office for National Statistics (2025). Note: This data captures many incidents that were not reported to the police. The chart is licensed CC BY to Our World in Data.

People living in England and Wales are much less likely to be victims of theft than in the 1990s—

Several data sources show that theft in England and Wales has declined in recent decades.

One of those is police records — but they only capture reported crimes, and many people don’t report thefts.

2 months ago 51 21 1 2
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✍️ New article: "How have crime rates in the United States changed over the last 50 years?"

Crime is clearly a concern for many people. Nearly 60% of Americans, for example, say that reducing crime should be a top priority for the US president and Congress.

3 months ago 69 21 3 5
screenshot of my post

screenshot of my post

Big new blogpost!

My guide to data visualization, which includes a very long table of contents, tons of charts, and more.

--> Why data visualization matters and how to make charts more effective, clear, transparent, and sometimes, beautiful.
www.scientificdiscovery.dev/p/salonis-gu...

4 months ago 799 316 22 50
A line chart showing annual CO2 emissions from fossil fuels and industry (not land use) for several countries from 1750 to 2024. Data from the Global Carbon Budget (2025)

A line chart showing annual CO2 emissions from fossil fuels and industry (not land use) for several countries from 1750 to 2024. Data from the Global Carbon Budget (2025)

We just published our “Top of the Charts”, a look at our most popular charts, articles, data insights & more in 2025! (link in 🧵)

Here are our top 5 most-viewed charts.

Each Friday over the next few weeks, we’ll share the top 5 for other categories (articles, etc.). Stay tuned!

1. CO2 emissions

4 months ago 75 29 4 4
The visual representation illustrates the global biomass of various animal groups, emphasizing the dominance of humans and livestock. Humans constitute 36% of total biomass, depicted by a grouping of figures representing people. Livestock and pets collectively make up 59% of biomass, represented below humans.

Within the livestock category, cattle are noted as the largest contributors at 38%, followed by sheep at 4%, buffalo at 6%, and goats and pigs, both at 3%. Horses, asses, and dogs each account for 3% and 2% respectively. 

Wild mammals, positioned at the bottom, represent only 5% of total biomass, illustrated by animal figures. 

The footer includes data sourced from Lior Greenspoon et al. in 2023, regarding the global biomass of wild mammals as published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The organization, Our World in Data, is credited for its role in providing research and data pertaining to global issues.

The visual representation illustrates the global biomass of various animal groups, emphasizing the dominance of humans and livestock. Humans constitute 36% of total biomass, depicted by a grouping of figures representing people. Livestock and pets collectively make up 59% of biomass, represented below humans. Within the livestock category, cattle are noted as the largest contributors at 38%, followed by sheep at 4%, buffalo at 6%, and goats and pigs, both at 3%. Horses, asses, and dogs each account for 3% and 2% respectively. Wild mammals, positioned at the bottom, represent only 5% of total biomass, illustrated by animal figures. The footer includes data sourced from Lior Greenspoon et al. in 2023, regarding the global biomass of wild mammals as published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The organization, Our World in Data, is credited for its role in providing research and data pertaining to global issues.

A diverse range of mammals once roamed the planet. This changed dramatically with the arrival of humans, who have become the dominant species through our own population, as well as the animals we breed and raise for food.

What is the distribution of the global mammal kingdom today?

4 months ago 80 30 2 5
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A world map shows the distribution of reported cases of guinea worm disease in 2024. Two countries are highlighted in darker shades: Chad, which has nine reported cases, and South Sudan, which has six reported cases. The rest of the map, particularly surrounding regions, is light-colored and marked as having no reported cases. The caption notes that there were only 15 reported cases globally and mentions that guinea worm disease is still endemic in three other countries. The data is sourced from the World Health Organization, with a note explaining that the disease is caused by a parasitic worm spread through contaminated water.

A world map shows the distribution of reported cases of guinea worm disease in 2024. Two countries are highlighted in darker shades: Chad, which has nine reported cases, and South Sudan, which has six reported cases. The rest of the map, particularly surrounding regions, is light-colored and marked as having no reported cases. The caption notes that there were only 15 reported cases globally and mentions that guinea worm disease is still endemic in three other countries. The data is sourced from the World Health Organization, with a note explaining that the disease is caused by a parasitic worm spread through contaminated water.

Only two countries recorded human cases of guinea worm disease in 2024

6 months ago 36 8 1 1
What Americans die from and the causes of death the US media reports on.

4 stacked bar charts. showing in short that while heart diseases and cancer constitutes 55% of the causes of death, they receive about 7% of the media coverages. Homicide is under 1% but receives between 42% and 52%. Terrorisme barely registers in the causes of death, but gets between 11% and 18%.

The first stacked bar is causes of death in the US in 2023
Heart diseases 29%
Cancer 26%
Accidents 9.5%
Stroke 6.9%
Lower respiratory diseases (6.2%)
Alzheimer's disease (4.8%)
Diabetes (4.0%)
Kidney failure (2.4%)
Liver disease (2.2%)
Suicide (2.1%)
COVID-19 (2.1%)
Influenza/Pneumonia (1.9%)
Drug overdose (1.8%)
Homicide (<1%)
Terrorism (<0.001%)

Media coverage of these causes of death in 2023 in...
New York Times
Heart disease (2.8%)
Cancer (4.1%)
Accidents (9.7%)
Suicide (3.8%)
COVID-19 (5.3%)
Drug overdose (7.5%)
Homicide (42%)
Terrorism (18%)

Washington Post
Heart disease (2.9%)
Cancer (4.7%)
Accidents (5.9%)
Suicide (3.3%)
COVID-19 (7.9%)
Drug overdose (9.5%)
Homicide (46%)
Terrorism (12%)

Fox News
Heart disease (2.3%)
Cancer (3.8%)
Accidents (6.1%)
Suicide (4.1%)
COVID-19 (6.0%)
Drug overdose (9.8%)
Homicide (52%)
Terrorism (11%)

Note: Based on the share of causes of death in the US and the share of mentions for each of the causes in the New York Times, the Washington Post and Fox News. All values are normalized to 100%, so the shares are relative to all deaths caused by the 12 most common causes + drug overdoses, homicides and terrorism. These causes account for more than 75% of deaths in the US.
A "media mention" is a published article in one of the outlets which mentions the cause (e.g. "influenza) or related keywords (e.g. "flu") least twice.
Data sources: Media mentions from Media Cloud (2025); deaths data from the US CDC (2025) and Global Terrorism Index.

Fox News

What Americans die from and the causes of death the US media reports on. 4 stacked bar charts. showing in short that while heart diseases and cancer constitutes 55% of the causes of death, they receive about 7% of the media coverages. Homicide is under 1% but receives between 42% and 52%. Terrorisme barely registers in the causes of death, but gets between 11% and 18%. The first stacked bar is causes of death in the US in 2023 Heart diseases 29% Cancer 26% Accidents 9.5% Stroke 6.9% Lower respiratory diseases (6.2%) Alzheimer's disease (4.8%) Diabetes (4.0%) Kidney failure (2.4%) Liver disease (2.2%) Suicide (2.1%) COVID-19 (2.1%) Influenza/Pneumonia (1.9%) Drug overdose (1.8%) Homicide (<1%) Terrorism (<0.001%) Media coverage of these causes of death in 2023 in... New York Times Heart disease (2.8%) Cancer (4.1%) Accidents (9.7%) Suicide (3.8%) COVID-19 (5.3%) Drug overdose (7.5%) Homicide (42%) Terrorism (18%) Washington Post Heart disease (2.9%) Cancer (4.7%) Accidents (5.9%) Suicide (3.3%) COVID-19 (7.9%) Drug overdose (9.5%) Homicide (46%) Terrorism (12%) Fox News Heart disease (2.3%) Cancer (3.8%) Accidents (6.1%) Suicide (4.1%) COVID-19 (6.0%) Drug overdose (9.8%) Homicide (52%) Terrorism (11%) Note: Based on the share of causes of death in the US and the share of mentions for each of the causes in the New York Times, the Washington Post and Fox News. All values are normalized to 100%, so the shares are relative to all deaths caused by the 12 most common causes + drug overdoses, homicides and terrorism. These causes account for more than 75% of deaths in the US. A "media mention" is a published article in one of the outlets which mentions the cause (e.g. "influenza) or related keywords (e.g. "flu") least twice. Data sources: Media mentions from Media Cloud (2025); deaths data from the US CDC (2025) and Global Terrorism Index. Fox News

This is really one of the best charts by @ourworldindata.org 📊

Amazing how much research and work goes into creating a chart like this. And it's such a good insight into society.

6 months ago 46 16 1 3
A bar chart showing that of all vertebrate groups (animals with a backbone and skull), amphibians face the highest risk of extinction. The data source is the IUCN Red List. The chart is licensed under CC BY to Our World in Data.

A bar chart showing that of all vertebrate groups (animals with a backbone and skull), amphibians face the highest risk of extinction. The data source is the IUCN Red List. The chart is licensed under CC BY to Our World in Data.

The threat of extinction is not spread evenly across the tree of life. To protect animals, it’s important to know which ones are most threatened and why.

Of all vertebrates (animals with a backbone and skull), amphibians are most threatened with extinction.

6 months ago 77 31 1 1
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Chartle - A daily chart game Guess the country in red by analysing today's chart

Launch day 🚀

We’ve just released @chartlecc.bsky.social - a daily chart game!

Your job is to guess which country is represented by the red line in today's chart. You get 5 tries, no other clues!

Play today, come back tomorrow for a different chart with new data and share with your chart friends 📈

7 months ago 125 53 12 28
The image presents a line graph depicting global maternal mortality rates from 1985 to 2023. The y-axis represents the number of maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, ranging from 0 to 500, while the x-axis spans the years from 1985 to 2023. 

The graph shows a downward trend in maternal mortality rates, starting at approximately 460 in 1985 and declining steadily over the years. A notable increase is observed during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, but by 2023, the rate has decreased to about 197. This marks a 57% reduction compared to the rates in 1985. 

Annotations highlight key points, such as the spike during the pandemic and the significant decrease achieved by 2023. 

The data sources for this graph include the WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, World Bank, and UN DESA (2025). There is a note stating that the estimates aim to adjust for underreporting and misclassification. The image is credited with a Creative Commons attribution.

The image presents a line graph depicting global maternal mortality rates from 1985 to 2023. The y-axis represents the number of maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, ranging from 0 to 500, while the x-axis spans the years from 1985 to 2023. The graph shows a downward trend in maternal mortality rates, starting at approximately 460 in 1985 and declining steadily over the years. A notable increase is observed during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, but by 2023, the rate has decreased to about 197. This marks a 57% reduction compared to the rates in 1985. Annotations highlight key points, such as the spike during the pandemic and the significant decrease achieved by 2023. The data sources for this graph include the WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, World Bank, and UN DESA (2025). There is a note stating that the estimates aim to adjust for underreporting and misclassification. The image is credited with a Creative Commons attribution.

Global maternal mortality rates have fallen by almost 60% since 1985

7 months ago 94 24 1 4
A line chart showing that large fires in August mean 2025 has been a record year for wildfires in Spain. The data is measured as cumulative area burnt by wildfires in hectares, and the chart has a line for each year from 2012 to 2025. Annotations explain that by August 5th, Spain's wildfires this year were below average. Just two weeks later, 2025 had overtaken all previous years with consistent records. The data source is the Global Wildfire Information System (2025). The chart is licensed CC BY to Our World in Data.

A line chart showing that large fires in August mean 2025 has been a record year for wildfires in Spain. The data is measured as cumulative area burnt by wildfires in hectares, and the chart has a line for each year from 2012 to 2025. Annotations explain that by August 5th, Spain's wildfires this year were below average. Just two weeks later, 2025 had overtaken all previous years with consistent records. The data source is the Global Wildfire Information System (2025). The chart is licensed CC BY to Our World in Data.

Spain is having its largest wildfire year in well over a decade

7 months ago 56 20 1 2
This image is a line graph depicting homicide rates in Ecuador from 1990 to 2023, measured as annual deaths from homicide per 100,000 people.

Initially, the graph shows low homicide rates, peaking near 20 per 100,000 around 2010, a time when Ecuador had some of the lowest rates in Latin America. However, there is a noticeable upward trend beginning around 2020, with rates increasing sharply. By 2023, the rate has surged dramatically to 46 per 100,000, indicating a more than fivefold increase from previous levels. 

The data source listed at the bottom is the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, dated 2025. The chart is licensed under CC BY for Our World in Data.

This image is a line graph depicting homicide rates in Ecuador from 1990 to 2023, measured as annual deaths from homicide per 100,000 people. Initially, the graph shows low homicide rates, peaking near 20 per 100,000 around 2010, a time when Ecuador had some of the lowest rates in Latin America. However, there is a noticeable upward trend beginning around 2020, with rates increasing sharply. By 2023, the rate has surged dramatically to 46 per 100,000, indicating a more than fivefold increase from previous levels. The data source listed at the bottom is the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, dated 2025. The chart is licensed under CC BY for Our World in Data.

Homicide rates in Ecuador have increased steeply in the last few years

7 months ago 32 4 3 4
Video

Vaccines are one of the most powerful tools in public health. They have saved hundreds of millions of lives by preventing deadly diseases like measles, polio, and smallpox. Before vaccines, these infections were common; surviving them often meant facing severe complications or lifelong disability.

8 months ago 157 71 2 5
A screenshot of the page that appears when 'Learn more about this data' is clicked on any of Our World in Data's interactive chart. 

The page shows detailed information about the source that the chart is based on, in this case, the WHO Mortality Database. 

It states that: 

The WHO mortality database is a collection death registration data including cause-of-death information from member states.

Where they are collected, death registration data are the best source of information on key health indicators, such as life expectancy, and death registration data with cause-of-death information are the best source of information on mortality by cause, such as maternal mortality and suicide mortality.

WHO requests from all countries annual data by age, sex, and complete ICD code (e.g., 4-digit code if the 10th revision of ICD was used). Countries have reported deaths by cause of death, year, sex, and age for inclusion in the WHO Mortality Database since 1950.

The WHO only includes data, which are properly coded according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD). Today the database is maintained by the WHO Division of Data, Analytics and Delivery for Impact (DDI) and contains data from over 120 countries and areas. Data reported by member states and selected areas are displayed in this portal’s interactive visualizations if the data are reported to the WHO mortality database in the requested format and at least 65% of deaths were recorded in each country and year.

Additional information includes the date the data was retrieved on, the url the data was retrieved from and a suggested citation for the data source.

A screenshot of the page that appears when 'Learn more about this data' is clicked on any of Our World in Data's interactive chart. The page shows detailed information about the source that the chart is based on, in this case, the WHO Mortality Database. It states that: The WHO mortality database is a collection death registration data including cause-of-death information from member states. Where they are collected, death registration data are the best source of information on key health indicators, such as life expectancy, and death registration data with cause-of-death information are the best source of information on mortality by cause, such as maternal mortality and suicide mortality. WHO requests from all countries annual data by age, sex, and complete ICD code (e.g., 4-digit code if the 10th revision of ICD was used). Countries have reported deaths by cause of death, year, sex, and age for inclusion in the WHO Mortality Database since 1950. The WHO only includes data, which are properly coded according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD). Today the database is maintained by the WHO Division of Data, Analytics and Delivery for Impact (DDI) and contains data from over 120 countries and areas. Data reported by member states and selected areas are displayed in this portal’s interactive visualizations if the data are reported to the WHO mortality database in the requested format and at least 65% of deaths were recorded in each country and year. Additional information includes the date the data was retrieved on, the url the data was retrieved from and a suggested citation for the data source.

We do our very best to attribute the data to our sources and to make information on our sources available to our users.

If you click 'Learn more about this data' on any of our interactive charts, a new window will open with more information about the indicator and data source used.

8 months ago 1 0 0 0
Bar chart showing the death rate from tuberculosis in 2021 for a selection of countries. Someone in Lesotho, the Central African Republic, or Gabon is at least 3,000 times more likely to die from TB than someone in the United States or Denmark. Data source: WHO (2024). Chart CC BY Our World in Data.

Bar chart showing the death rate from tuberculosis in 2021 for a selection of countries. Someone in Lesotho, the Central African Republic, or Gabon is at least 3,000 times more likely to die from TB than someone in the United States or Denmark. Data source: WHO (2024). Chart CC BY Our World in Data.

✍️ New article: "The world left its fight against tuberculosis unfinished — how can we complete the job?"

8 months ago 58 17 1 0
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💡New feature rolling out: switch between different indicators on our data pages!

For example, on our page showing childhood vaccination coverage, you can easily switch between the share and number of children vaccinated (and unvaccinated), and compare across vaccines or focus on a particular one.

9 months ago 65 13 1 1
A line chart showing tuberculosis cases in the United States from 1975 to 2023. In the second half of the 1980s there was a rise in the number of cases before falling again. Data source: US CDC (2024). CCBY Our World in Data

A line chart showing tuberculosis cases in the United States from 1975 to 2023. In the second half of the 1980s there was a rise in the number of cases before falling again. Data source: US CDC (2024). CCBY Our World in Data

✍️ New article: The end of tuberculosis that wasn’t

9 months ago 64 14 2 0
Video

💡 Very excited to announce new features: better interactive maps! 🗺️

– Enhanced country/region selection with several sorting options and a bar chart preview
– Selecting a country highlights it and shows its value on the map
– Zooming to your selection brings up a 3D globe view 🌍

10 months ago 158 36 5 8
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Progress can sometimes be slow, but with persistence it is possible. Take the case of leaded gasoline.

10 months ago 83 16 2 0
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📊 Data update: We've just updated the data in our charts on homicides.

The data comes from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime 2025 release.

This update was led on our team by @spoonerf.bsky.social.

10 months ago 25 7 4 2
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Measles vaccines save millions of lives each year Measles once killed millions every year. Vaccines changed this, preventing disease, long-term immune damage, and deadly outbreaks.

In a new article, @scientificdiscovery.dev and @spoonerf.bsky.social tell the story of measles vaccines and their life-saving impact: ourworldindata.org/measles-vacc...

10 months ago 27 11 2 2
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Few things are more heartbreaking than the death of a young child.

For most of humanity’s past, these tragedies occurred all too frequently — half of all children died. This was true no matter where in the world a child was born, even in the richest countries.

10 months ago 69 15 2 5
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Measles vaccines save millions of lives each year Measles once killed millions every year. Vaccines changed this, preventing disease, long-term immune damage, and deadly outbreaks.

Thanks, we've now added a note in the caption to acknowledge the inspiration - ourworldindata.org/measles-vacc...

11 months ago 6 0 1 0

Thanks for the kind words Francis! You are right this is our attempt at updating the classic WSJ chart.

11 months ago 6 0 1 0
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Measles vaccines save millions of lives each year Measles once killed millions every year. Vaccines changed this, preventing disease, long-term immune damage, and deadly outbreaks.

In just the last 50 years, it’s estimated that measles vaccinations have prevented over 90 million deaths worldwide.

In a new article, @spoonerf.bsky.social and I describe how they were developed and scaled up worldwide, and the impact they've had:

11 months ago 147 51 1 1
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An important reminder that measles vaccines save millions of lives every year across the world.

The measles vaccine is arguably the most life-saving vaccine in use.

Our latest article from @scientificdiscovery.dev and @spoonerf.bsky.social: ourworldindata.org/measles-vacc...

11 months ago 2125 601 17 17
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How effective and safe are measles vaccines? Data from large meta-analyses show that measles vaccination is highly effective and safe, giving a 95% reduction in the risk of measles.

‘The data shows that just one dose cuts the chances of measles by about 95%, and two doses do even better.’

Timely review of the data on measles vaccines from @ourworldindata.org
ourworldindata.org/measles-vacc...

1 year ago 92 49 1 1
A scatter plot showing the peak blossom date of cherry blossom in Kyoto, Japan from 812 to 2025. The trend oscillates around mid-April until the mid 19th century where it moves consistently earlier in the year, in 2025 it happened on 4th April.

A scatter plot showing the peak blossom date of cherry blossom in Kyoto, Japan from 812 to 2025. The trend oscillates around mid-April until the mid 19th century where it moves consistently earlier in the year, in 2025 it happened on 4th April.

In 2025, the peak cherry blossom of happened on April 4th.

This long-run data is a proxy for how the climate has changed.

Since the early 20th century, the combined effects of urbanization and higher temperatures due to climate change have gradually moved the peak blossom earlier in the year.

1 year ago 11 6 0 1