4.5 Article Book Chapter

Accounting for Confounding in Observational Studies

Journal

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-032816-045030

Keywords

causation; confounding; causal diagram; propensity scores; natural experiments; quasi-experiments

Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse [R01DA048042]
  2. National Institute of Mental Health [R01MH102221]
  3. American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

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The goal of this review is to enable clinical psychology researchers to more rigorously test competing hypotheses when studying risk factors in observational studies. We argue that there is a critical need for researchers to leverage recent advances in epidemiology/biostatistics related to causal inference and to use innovative approaches to address a key limitation of observational research: the need to account for confounding. We first review theoretical issues related to the study of causation, how causal diagrams can facilitate the identification and testing of competing hypotheses, and the current limitations of observational research in the field. We then describe two broad approaches that help account for confounding: analytic approaches that account for measured traits and designs that account for unmeasured factors. We provide descriptions of several such approaches and highlight their strengths and limitations, particularly as they relate to the etiology and treatment of behavioral health problems.

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