A systematic review of the reporting of tinnitus prevalence and severity
University of Nottingham · NIHR Nottingham Hearing Biomedical Research Unit · +2 more institutions
Abstract
There is no standard diagnostic criterion for tinnitus, although some clinical assessment instruments do exist for identifying patient complaints. Within epidemiological studies the presence of tinnitus is determined primarily by self-report, typically in response to a single question. Using these methods prevalence figures vary widely. Given the variety of published estimates worldwide, we assessed and collated published prevalence estimates of tinnitus and tinnitus severity, creating a narrative synthesis of the data. The variability between prevalence estimates was investigated in order to determine any barriers to data synthesis and to identify reasons for heterogeneity.
and analysis: A systematic review included all adult population studies reporting the prevalence of tinnitus from January 1980 to July 2015. We searched five databases (Embase, Medline, PsychInfo, CINAHL and Web Of Science), using a combination of medical subject headings (MeSH) and relevant text words. Observational studies including cross-sectional studies were included, but studies estimating the incidence of tinnitus (e.g. cohort studies) were outside the scope of this systematic review.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.60
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 72
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Tinnitus
- CINAHL
- Medicine
- MEDLINE
- Data extraction
- Epidemiology
- Observational study
- Population
- Good health and well-being