Doubly robust proximal synthetic controls

Author:

Qiu Hongxiang1ORCID,Shi Xu2ORCID,Miao Wang3,Dobriban Edgar4,Tchetgen Tchetgen Eric4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Michigan State University , East Lansing, MI 48824 , United States

2. Department of Biostatistics, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, MI 48109 , United States

3. Department of Probability and Statistics, Peking University , Beijing 100871 , China

4. Department of Statistics and Data Science, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, PA 19104 , United States

Abstract

ABSTRACT To infer the treatment effect for a single treated unit using panel data, synthetic control (SC) methods construct a linear combination of control units’ outcomes that mimics the treated unit’s pre-treatment outcome trajectory. This linear combination is subsequently used to impute the counterfactual outcomes of the treated unit had it not been treated in the post-treatment period, and used to estimate the treatment effect. Existing SC methods rely on correctly modeling certain aspects of the counterfactual outcome generating mechanism and may require near-perfect matching of the pre-treatment trajectory. Inspired by proximal causal inference, we obtain two novel nonparametric identifying formulas for the average treatment effect for the treated unit: one is based on weighting, and the other combines models for the counterfactual outcome and the weighting function. We introduce the concept of covariate shift to SCs to obtain these identification results conditional on the treatment assignment. We also develop two treatment effect estimators based on these two formulas and generalized method of moments. One new estimator is doubly robust: it is consistent and asymptotically normal if at least one of the outcome and weighting models is correctly specified. We demonstrate the performance of the methods via simulations and apply them to evaluate the effectiveness of a pneumococcal conjugate vaccine on the risk of all-cause pneumonia in Brazil.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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