4.3 Article

Confounding in Statistical Mediation Analysis: What It Is and How to Address It

Journal

JOURNAL OF COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 6, Pages 659-671

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/cou0000242

Keywords

mediation; causal inference; confounder adjustment

Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) [R37 DA09757]
  2. NIDA [T32 DA039772, F31 DA043317]

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Psychology researchers are often interested in mechanisms underlying how randomized interventions affect outcomes such as substance use and mental health. Mediation analysis is a common statistical method for investigating psychological mechanisms that has benefited from exciting new methodological improvements over the last 2 decades. One of the most important new developments is methodology for estimating causal mediated effects using the potential outcomes framework for causal inference. Potential outcomes-based methods developed in epidemiology and statistics have important implications for understanding psychological mechanisms. We aim to provide a concise introduction to and illustration of these new methods and emphasize the importance of confounder adjustment. First, we review the traditional regression approach for estimating mediated effects. Second, we describe the potential outcomes framework. Third, we define what a confounder is and how the presence of a confounder can provide misleading evidence regarding mechanisms of interventions. Fourth, we describe experimental designs that can help rule out confounder bias. Fifth, we describe new statistical approaches to adjust for measured confounders of the mediator-outcome relation and sensitivity analyses to probe effects of unmeasured confounders on the mediated effect. All approaches are illustrated with application to a real counseling intervention dataset. Counseling psychologists interested in understanding the causal mechanisms of their interventions can benefit from incorporating the most up-to-date techniques into their mediation analyses.

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