Estimating intervention effects in a complex multi-level smoking prevention study

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Abstract

Instrumental variables; multi-level intervention study; non-compliance; treatment effect This paper illustrates how to estimate cumulative and non-cumulative treatment effects in a complex school-based smoking intervention study. The Instrumental Variable method is used to tackle non-compliance and measurement error for a range of treatment exposure measures (binary, ordinal and continuous) in the presence of clustering and dropout. The results are compared to more routine analyses. The empirical findings from this study provide little encouragement for believing that poorly resourced school-based interventions can bring about substantial long-lasting reductions in smoking behaviour but that novel components such as a computer game might have some short-term effect.

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Falcaro, M., Povey, A. C., Fielder, A., Nahit, E., & Pickles, A. (2009). Estimating intervention effects in a complex multi-level smoking prevention study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 6(2), 463–477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph6020463

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