Assessing the total effect of time-varying predictors in prevention research.
Journal
  Prevention science : the official journal of the Society for Prevention Research.
Citation
  Prev Sci. 7(1):1-17
Publication date
  2006 Mar
Authors
  Bray BC
Almirall D
Zimmerman RS
Lynam D
Murphy SA
Grant agencies
  National Institute on Drug Abuse
Grants
  NIDA K02-DA-15674-01
NIDA P50-DA-10075
NIDA T32-DA-017629
Abstract
  Observational data are often used to address prevention questions such as, "If alcohol initiation could be delayed, would that in turn cause a delay in marijuana initiation?" This question is concerned with the total causal effect of the timing of alcohol initiation on the timing of marijuana initiation. Unfortunately, when observational data are used to address a question such as the above, alternative explanations for the observed relationship between the predictor, here timing of alcohol initiation, and the response abound. These alternative explanations are due to the presence of confounders. Adjusting for confounders when using observational data is a particularly challenging problem when the predictor and confounders are time-varying. When time-varying confounders are present, the standard method of adjusting for confounders may fail to reduce bias and indeed can increase bias. In this paper, an intuitive and accessible graphical approach is used to illustrate how the standard method of controlling for confounders may result in biased total causal effect estimates. The graphical approach also provides an intuitive justification for an alternate method proposed by James Robins [Robins, J. M. (1998). 1997 Proceedings of the American Statistical Association, section on Bayesian statistical science (pp. 1-10). Retrieved from http://www.biostat.harvard.edu/robins/research.html; Robins, J. M., HernĂ¡n, M., & Brumback, B. (2000). Epidemiology, 11(5), 550-560]. The above two methods are illustrated by addressing the motivating question. Implications for prevention researchers who wish to estimate total causal effects using longitudinal observational data are discussed.