Two-Phase Treatment with Noncompliance: Identifying the Cumulative Average Treatment Effect via Multisite Instrumental Variables
Two-Phase Treatment with Noncompliance: Identifying the Cumulative Average Treatment Effect via Multisite Instrumental Variables
In evaluating a multi-phase intervention, the cumulative average treatment effect (ATE) is often the causal estimand of key interest. Yet some individuals who do not respond well to the Phase-I treatment may subsequently display noncompliant behaviors. However, noncompliance tends to be constrained by the stochastic availability of slots under the alternative treatment condition in Phase II, which makes the notion of the "complier average treatment effect" problematic. Moreover, the Phase-I treatment is expected to affect an individual's potential outcomes through additional pathways that violate the exclusion restriction. Extending an instrumental variable (IV) strategy for multisite trials, we clarify conditions for identifying the cumulative ATE of a two-phase treatment by employing the random assignment of the Phase-I treatment as the IV. Our strategy relaxes the exclusion restriction and the sequential ignorability in their conventional forms. We evaluate the performance of the new strategy through simulations. Reanalyzing data from the Tennessee class size study in which students and teachers were assigned at random to either a small or a regular class in kindergarten (Phase I) yet noncompliance occurred in Grade 1 (Phase II), we estimate the cumulative ATE of receiving two years of instruction in a small class versus a regular class.
Guanglei Hong、Xu Qin、Zhengyan Xu、Fan Yang
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Guanglei Hong,Xu Qin,Zhengyan Xu,Fan Yang.Two-Phase Treatment with Noncompliance: Identifying the Cumulative Average Treatment Effect via Multisite Instrumental Variables[EB/OL].(2025-06-03)[2025-07-01].https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.03104.点此复制
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