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Instrumental variable estimation of dynamic treatment effects on a duration outcome

Author

Listed:
  • Jad Beyhum
  • Samuele Centorrino
  • Jean-Pierre Florens
  • Ingrid Van Keilegom

Abstract

This paper considers identification and estimation of the causal effect of the time Z until a subject is treated on a survival outcome T. The treatment is not randomly assigned, T is randomly right censored by a random variable C and the time to treatment Z is right censored by min(T,C). The endogeneity issue is treated using an instrumental variable explaining Z and independent of the error term of the model. We study identification in a fully nonparametric framework. We show that our specification generates an integral equation, of which the regression function of interest is a solution. We provide identification conditions that rely on this identification equation. For estimation purposes, we assume that the regression function follows a parametric model. We propose an estimation procedure and give conditions under which the estimator is asymptotically normal. The estimators exhibit good finite sample properties in simulations. Our methodology is applied to find evidence supporting the efficacy of a therapy for burn-out.

Suggested Citation

  • Jad Beyhum & Samuele Centorrino & Jean-Pierre Florens & Ingrid Van Keilegom, 2022. "Instrumental variable estimation of dynamic treatment effects on a duration outcome," Papers 2201.10826, arXiv.org, revised Dec 2022.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2201.10826
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    File URL: http://arxiv.org/pdf/2201.10826
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