When the Ends do not Justify the Means: Learning Who is Predicted to Have Harmful Indirect Effects

Author:

Rudolph Kara E.1,Díaz Iván2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health Columbia University , New York City, New York , USA

2. Division of Biostatistics, Department of Population Health Sciences Weill Cornell Medicine , New York City, New York , USA

Abstract

Abstract There is a growing literature on finding rules by which to assign treatment based on an individual’s characteristics such that a desired outcome under the intervention is maximised. A related goal entails identifying a sub-population of individuals predicted to have a harmful indirect effect (the effect of treatment on an outcome through mediators), perhaps even in the presence of a predicted beneficial total treatment effect. In some cases, the implications of a likely harmful indirect effect may outweigh an anticipated beneficial total treatment effect, and would motivate further discussion of whether to treat identified individuals. We build on the mediation and optimal treatment rule literatures to propose a method of identifying a subgroup for which the treatment effect through the mediator is expected to be harmful. Our approach is non-parametric, incorporates post-treatment confounders of the mediator–outcome relationship, and does not make restrictions on the distribution of baseline covariates, mediating variables or outcomes. We apply the proposed approach to identify a subgroup of boys in the Moving To Opportunity housing voucher experiment who are predicted to have a harmful indirect effect of housing voucher receipt on subsequent psychiatric disorder incidence through aspects of their school and neighbourhood environments.

Funder

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty,Economics and Econometrics,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Statistics and Probability

Reference58 articles.

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