A tutorial on a marginal structural modeling approach to mediation analysis in occupational health research: Investigating education, employment quality, and mortality

Author:

Eisenberg‐Guyot Jerzy12ORCID,Blaikie Kieran2ORCID,Andrea Sarah B.3,Oddo Vanessa4ORCID,Peckham Trevor5,Minh Anita26,Owens Shanise7,Hajat Anjum2

Affiliation:

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

2. Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

3. School of Public Health Oregon Health & Science University‐Portland State University Portland Oregon USA

4. Department of Kinesiology and Nutrition, College of Applied Health Sciences University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

5. Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Services, School of Public Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

6. School of Population and Public Health University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

7. Department of Health Systems and Population Health, School of Public Health University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractLife expectancy inequities between more‐ and less‐educated groups have grown by 1 to 2 years over the last several decades in the United States. Simultaneously, employment conditions for many workers have deteriorated. Researchers hypothesize that these adverse conditions mediate educational inequities in mortality. However, methodological barriers have impeded research on the role of employment conditions and other hazards as mediating factors in health inequities. Indeed, traditional mediation analysis methods are often biased in occupational health settings, including in those with exposure‐mediator interactions and mediator‐outcome confounders that are caused by exposure. In this paper, we outline—and provide code for—a marginal structural modeling (MSM) approach for estimating total effects and controlled direct effects originally proposed elsewhere, which can be applied to common mediation analysis settings in occupational health research. As an example, we apply our approach to assess the extent to which disparities in employment quality (EQ)—a multidimensional construct characterizing the terms and conditions of the worker‐employer relationship—explained educational inequities in mortality in a 1999–2015 US Panel Study of Income Dynamics sample of workers with mortality follow‐up through 2017. Under certain strong assumptions described in the text, our estimates suggest that over 70% of the educational inequity in mortality would have been eliminated if EQ had been at the 80th percentile (100th = best) across exposure groups.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities

National Institute on Aging

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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