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Estimating effects of hypothetical public health interventions on health disparities: A standardization-based simulation approach

Wang, Xi; Komura, Toshiaki; Arakawa, Yuki; Chen, Ruijia; Nakagomi, Atsushi; Steptoe, Andrew; Shiba, Koichiro; (2025) Estimating effects of hypothetical public health interventions on health disparities: A standardization-based simulation approach. American Journal of Epidemiology , Article kwaf279. 10.1093/aje/kwaf279.

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Abstract

Causal inference research typically estimates effects on population average health rather than impacts on health disparities. We present a standardization-based approach to simulate how altering population distributions of exposures might change health disparities, with explicit consideration of two mechanisms: differential exposure distributions and heterogeneous exposure effects across social groups. Using data from the Health and Retirement Study (n=11,322) and the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (n=5,179), we examined how hypothetical interventions reducing social isolation and loneliness might affect socioeconomic and racial disparities in cognitive functioning among older adults. Social isolation was longitudinally associated with lower average cognitive functioning in both HRS and ELSA, with evidence of effect heterogeneity in the HRS sample, where the adverse association was stronger among individuals with lower education, Black race, and paradoxically, higher income/wealth. Simulations demonstrated that reducing social isolation would narrow cognitive disparities across income, wealth, education, and race. Interventions specifically targeting exposure disparities achieved greater reductions than uniform approaches. This framework enables researchers to move beyond estimating average treatment effects to quantifying how different intervention strategies might reduce health disparities between social groups.

Type: Article
Title: Estimating effects of hypothetical public health interventions on health disparities: A standardization-based simulation approach
Location: United States
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwaf279
Publisher version: https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwaf279
Language: English
Additional information: This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher’s terms and conditions.
Keywords: causal inference, cognitive functioning, effect heterogeneity, health disparities, social isolation
UCL classification: UCL
UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices > School of Life and Medical Sciences
UCL > Provost and Vice Provost Offices > School of Life and Medical Sciences > Faculty of Population Health Sciences > Institute of Epidemiology and Health > Behavioural Science and Health
URI: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10219847
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