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Exposure Effects on Count Outcomes with Observational Data, with Application to Incarcerated Women

Authors :
Shook-Sa, Bonnie E.
Hudgens, Michael G.
Knittel, Andrea K.
Edmonds, Andrew
Ramirez, Catalina
Cole, Stephen R.
Cohen, Mardge
Adedimeji, Adebola
Taylor, Tonya
Michel, Katherine G.
Kovacs, Andrea
Cohen, Jennifer
Donohue, Jessica
Foster, Antonina
Fischl, Margaret A.
Long, Dustin
Adimora, Adaora A.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Causal inference methods can be applied to estimate the effect of a point exposure or treatment on an outcome of interest using data from observational studies. For example, in the Women's Interagency HIV Study, it is of interest to understand the effects of incarceration on the number of sexual partners and the number of cigarettes smoked after incarceration. In settings like this where the outcome is a count, the estimand is often the causal mean ratio, i.e., the ratio of the counterfactual mean count under exposure to the counterfactual mean count under no exposure. This paper considers estimators of the causal mean ratio based on inverse probability of treatment weights, the parametric g-formula, and doubly robust estimation, each of which can account for overdispersion, zero-inflation, and heaping in the measured outcome. Methods are compared in simulations and are applied to data from the Women's Interagency HIV Study.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2202.01650
Document Type :
Working Paper