The Revolution Will Be Hard to Evaluate: How Co-Occurring Policy Changes Affect Research on the Health Effects of Social Policies.

IF 5.2 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Epidemiologic Reviews Pub Date : 2022-01-14 DOI:10.1093/epirev/mxab009
Ellicott C Matthay, Erin Hagan, Spruha Joshi, May Lynn Tan, David Vlahov, Nancy Adler, M Maria Glymour
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Abstract

Extensive empirical health research leverages variation in the timing and location of policy changes as quasi-experiments. Multiple social policies may be adopted simultaneously in the same locations, creating co-occurrence that must be addressed analytically for valid inferences. The pervasiveness and consequences of co-occurring policies have received limited attention. We analyzed a systematic sample of 13 social policy databases covering diverse domains including poverty, paid family leave, and tobacco use. We quantified policy co-occurrence in each database as the fraction of variation in each policy measure across different jurisdictions and times that could be explained by covariation with other policies. We used simulations to estimate the ratio of the variance of effect estimates under the observed policy co-occurrence to variance if policies were independent. Policy co-occurrence ranged from very high for state-level cannabis policies to low for country-level sexual minority-rights policies. For 65% of policies, greater than 90% of the place-time variation was explained by other policies. Policy co-occurrence increased the variance of effect estimates by a median of 57-fold. Co-occurring policies are common and pose a major methodological challenge to rigorously evaluating health effects of individual social policies. When uncontrolled, co-occurring policies confound one another, and when controlled, resulting positivity violations may substantially inflate the variance of estimated effects. Tools to enhance validity and precision for evaluating co-occurring policies are needed.

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革命难以评估:同时发生的政策变化如何影响社会政策对健康影响的研究》(The Revolution Will Hard Evaluate: How Co-Occurcurring Policy Changes Affect Research on the Health Effects of Social Policies)。
广泛的实证健康研究利用政策变化的时间和地点变化作为准实验。在同一地点可能会同时采用多种社会政策,这就产生了共同发生的现象,必须对其进行分析才能得出有效的推论。对同时出现的政策的普遍性和后果的关注还很有限。我们对 13 个社会政策数据库进行了系统抽样分析,这些数据库涵盖了贫困、带薪家事假和烟草使用等不同领域。我们将每个数据库中的政策共存性量化为每个政策措施在不同司法管辖区和不同时间的变异中,可由与其他政策的共变解释的部分。我们通过模拟来估算观察到的政策共存情况下的效应估计方差与政策独立情况下的方差之比。政策共现程度从州级大麻政策的非常高到国家级性少数群体权利政策的较低不等。在 65% 的政策中,超过 90% 的地点-时间变异是由其他政策解释的。政策共存使效应估计值的方差增加了 57 倍。政策共存的现象很常见,这对严格评估单项社会政策的健康影响构成了方法上的重大挑战。当不加以控制时,同时出现的政策会相互混淆;而当加以控制时,由此产生的正向违规可能会大大增加估计效果的方差。我们需要一些工具来提高评估同时出现的政策的有效性和精确性。
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来源期刊
Epidemiologic Reviews
Epidemiologic Reviews 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: Epidemiologic Reviews is a leading review journal in public health. Published once a year, issues collect review articles on a particular subject. Recent issues have focused on The Obesity Epidemic, Epidemiologic Research on Health Disparities, and Epidemiologic Approaches to Global Health.
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