How does a local instrumental variable method perform across settings with instruments of differing strengths? A simulation study and an evaluation of emergency surgery

Author:

Moler‐Zapata Silvia1ORCID,Grieve Richard1ORCID,Basu Anirban23ORCID,O’Neill Stephen1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Services Research and Policy London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK

2. Department of Pharmacy, and Departments of Health Services and Economics The Comparative Health Outcomes, Policy, and Economics (CHOICE) Institute University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

3. National Bureau of Economic Research Cambridge Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractLocal instrumental variable (LIV) approaches use continuous/multi‐valued instrumental variables (IV) to generate consistent estimates of average treatment effects (ATEs) and Conditional Average Treatment Effects (CATEs). There is little evidence on how LIV approaches perform according to the strength of the IV or with different sample sizes. Our simulation study examined the performance of an LIV method, and a two‐stage least squares (2SLS) approach across different sample sizes and IV strengths. We considered four ‘heterogeneity’ scenarios: homogeneity, overt heterogeneity (over measured covariates), essential heterogeneity (unmeasured), and overt and essential heterogeneity combined. In all scenarios, LIV reported estimates with low bias even with the smallest sample size, provided that the instrument was strong. Compared to 2SLS, LIV provided estimates for ATE and CATE with lower levels of bias and Root Mean Squared Error. With smaller sample sizes, both approaches required stronger IVs to ensure low bias. We considered both methods in evaluating emergency surgery (ES) for three acute gastrointestinal conditions. Whereas 2SLS found no differences in the effectiveness of ES according to subgroup, LIV reported that frailer patients had worse outcomes following ES. In settings with continuous IVs of moderate strength, LIV approaches are better suited than 2SLS to estimate policy‐relevant treatment effect parameters.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health Policy

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