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Erschienen in: Prevention Science 2/2013

01.04.2013

Subgroups Analysis when Treatment and Moderators are Time-varying

verfasst von: Daniel Almirall, Daniel F. McCaffrey, Rajeev Ramchand, Susan A. Murphy

Erschienen in: Prevention Science | Ausgabe 2/2013

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Abstract

Prevention scientists are often interested in understanding characteristics of participants that are predictive of treatment effects because these characteristics can be used to inform the types of individuals who benefit more or less from treatment or prevention programs. Often, effect moderation questions are examined using subgroups analysis or, equivalently, using covariate × treatment interactions in the context of regression analysis. This article focuses on conceptualizing and examining causal effect moderation in longitudinal settings in which both treatment and the putative moderators are time-varying. Studying effect moderation in the time-varying setting helps identify which individuals will benefit more or less from additional treatment services on the basis of both individual characteristics and their evolving outcomes, symptoms, severity, and need. Examining effect moderation in these longitudinal settings, however, is difficult because moderators of future treatment may themselves be affected by prior treatment (for example, future moderators may be mediators of prior treatment). This article introduces moderated intermediate causal effects in the time-varying setting, describes how they are part of Robins’ Structural Nested Mean Model, discusses two problems with using a traditional regression approach to estimate these effects, and describes a new approach (a two-stage regression estimator) to estimate these effects. The methodology is illustrated using longitudinal data to examine the time-varying effects of receiving community-based substance abuse treatment as a function of time-varying severity (or need).
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Metadaten
Titel
Subgroups Analysis when Treatment and Moderators are Time-varying
verfasst von
Daniel Almirall
Daniel F. McCaffrey
Rajeev Ramchand
Susan A. Murphy
Publikationsdatum
01.04.2013
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Prevention Science / Ausgabe 2/2013
Print ISSN: 1389-4986
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-6695
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11121-011-0208-7

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