论文标题
COVID-19政策影响评估:常见设计问题指南
COVID-19 Policy Impact Evaluation: A guide to common design issues
论文作者
论文摘要
对Covid-19的政策响应,特别是与非药物干预措施相关的政策响应,规模和范围是前所未有的。流行病学家比以往任何时候都更多地参与政策决策和证据。但是,政策影响评估始终需要情况,需要复杂的情况,研究设计,数据,统计和分析。除了任何政策面临的问题之外,对COVID-19政策的评估还使与传染病动态和滞后有关的其他挑战,缺乏直接观察关键结果以及在加速时间范围内发生多种干预措施的挑战变得复杂。政策级影响评估所需的方法经常在流行病学中使用或教授,并且在重要的方式上差异可能并不明显。政策评估的数量,速度和方法论上的并发症可能使决策者和研究人员难以合成和评估COVID-19-19-health政策论文中的证据实力。 在本文中,我们(1)介绍了有关观察数据的政策影响评估设计的基本套件,包括横截面分析,预/帖子,中断,时间序列中断以及差异差异分析,(2)在这些要求和审查中违反了这些概念的概念和审查的关键方法,并提供了这些概念的概念,并提供了(3)概述(3)和(3)和(3)和(3)和(3),以及(3)和(3),以及(3)和(3)和(3)和审查。违规。本文的总体目标是帮助流行病学家,政策制定者,期刊编辑,记者,研究人员和其他研究消费者理解并权衡决策必不可少的证据的优势和局限性。
Policy responses to COVID-19, particularly those related to non-pharmaceutical interventions, are unprecedented in scale and scope. Epidemiologists are more involved in policy decisions and evidence generation than ever before. However, policy impact evaluations always require a complex combination of circumstance, study design, data, statistics, and analysis. Beyond the issues that are faced for any policy, evaluation of COVID-19 policies is complicated by additional challenges related to infectious disease dynamics and lags, lack of direct observation of key outcomes, and a multiplicity of interventions occurring on an accelerated time scale. The methods needed for policy-level impact evaluation are not often used or taught in epidemiology, and differ in important ways that may not be obvious. The volume and speed, and methodological complications of policy evaluations can make it difficult for decision-makers and researchers to synthesize and evaluate strength of evidence in COVID-19 health policy papers. In this paper, we (1) introduce the basic suite of policy impact evaluation designs for observational data, including cross-sectional analyses, pre/post, interrupted time-series, and difference-in-differences analysis, (2) demonstrate key ways in which the requirements and assumptions underlying these designs are often violated in the context of COVID-19, and (3) provide decision-makers and reviewers a conceptual and graphical guide to identifying these key violations. The overall goal of this paper is to help epidemiologists, policy-makers, journal editors, journalists, researchers, and other research consumers understand and weigh the strengths and limitations of evidence that is essential to decision-making.