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. 2020 Oct 16;2020:8814557. doi: 10.1155/2020/8814557

Table 2.

Characteristics of studies included in the systematic review and meta-analysis of the prevalence of burnout among nurses in Ethiopia.

Authors and year of publication Study region Data collection year Study design Sample size Cases Prevalence (%) Study population Study setting Diagnostic criteria of burnout Quality assessment (based on NOS)
Zewdu et al., 2017 [26] Amhara February 20 to March 30/2017 CS 361 152 42.10 Nurses Mixed MBI-HSS 8
Bhagavathula et al., 2018 [27] Amhara September to November 2016 CS 192 23 11.98 HCP Hospital MBI-HSS 7
Biksegn et al., 2016 [14] Oromiya November to December 2013 CS 237 102 43.03 HCP Hospital MBI-HSS 8
Adbaru et al., 2019 [24] Amhara March to April 2017 CS 369 186 50.40 Nurses Hospital MBI-HSS 9
Yatasa, 2014 [17] Addis Ababa June to December 2013 CS 297 99 33.33 Nurses Hospital MBI-HSS 9
Redae and Dai, 2019 [15] Tigray March to April 2017 CS 123 61 49.60 HCP Hospital MBI-HSS 7
Selamu et al., 2019 [16] SNNPR July to December 2014 CS 75 30 40.00 HCP Mixed MBI-HSS 6

SNNPR: Southern Nation Nationalities and People Representative; CS: cross-sectional; CO: cohort; HCP: healthcare professionals; NOS: Newcastle-Ottawa Scale; MBI-HSS: Maslach's Burnout Inventory-Human Services Survey; mixed: it includes hospital, health center, and/or health post.