Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Natural experiments for the evaluation of place...

Electronic data

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Natural experiments for the evaluation of place-based public health interventions: a methodology scoping review

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

Published
  • Patricia Albers
  • Chiara Rinaldi
  • Kate Mason
  • Katrina d’Apice
  • Elizabeth McGill
  • Cheryl McQuire
  • Peter Craig
  • Anthony A Laverty
  • Morgan Beeson
  • Mhairi Campbell
  • Matt Egan
  • Marcia` Gibson
  • Maxwell Fuller
  • Amy Dillon
  • David Taylor-Robinson
  • Russell Jago
  • Kate Tilling
  • Benjamin Barr
  • Falko Sniehotta
  • Matthew Hickman
  • Christopher Millet
  • Frank de Vocht
Close
Article number1192055
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>22/06/2023
<mark>Journal</mark>Frontiers in Public Health
Volume11
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Place-based public health evaluations are increasingly making use of natural experiments. This scoping review aimed to provide an overview of the design and use of natural experiment evaluations (NEEs), and an assessment of the plausibility of the randomization assumption. A systematic search of three bibliographic databases (Pubmed, Web of Science and Ovid-Medline) was conducted in January 2020 to capture publications that reported a natural experiment of a place-based public health intervention or outcome. For each, study design elements were extracted. An additional evaluation of randomization was conducted by 12 of this paper's authors who evaluated the same set of 20 randomly selected studies and assessed ' ' randomization for each. 366 NEE studies of place-based public health interventions were identified. The most commonly used NEE approach was a Difference-in-Differences study design (25%), followed by before-after studies (23%) and regression analysis studies. 42% of NEEs had likely or probable randomization of exposure (the intervention), while for 25% this was implausible. An inter-rater agreement exercise indicated poor reliability of randomization assignment. Only about half of NEEs reported some form of sensitivity or falsification analysis to support inferences. NEEs are conducted using many different designs and statistical methods and encompass various definitions of a natural experiment, while it is questionable whether all evaluations reported as natural experiments should be considered as such. The likelihood of randomization should be specifically reported, and primary analyses should be supported by sensitivity analyses and/or falsification tests. Transparent reporting of NEE designs and evaluation methods will contribute to the optimum use of place-based NEEs. [Abstract copyright: Copyright © 2023 Albers, Rinaldi, Brown, Mason, d'Apice, McGill, McQuire, Craig, Laverty, Beeson, Campbell, Egan, Gibson, Fuller, Dillon, Taylor-Robinson, Jago, Tilling, Barr, Sniehotta, Hickman, Millett and de Vocht.]