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The effect of health on socioeconomic status: Using instrumental variables to revisit a successful randomized controlled trial
Institution:1. Shenzhen Research Institute & Department of Statistics, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, New Territories, Hong Kong, China;2. School of Statistics and Mathematics, Yunnan University, Kunming, Yunnan, China;3. Division of Biostatistics, Sager Institute, London, UK;1. Department of Surgery, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA;2. Division of Research and Optimal Patient Care, American College of Surgeons, Chicago, IL;3. Veteran''s Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles, CA;4. Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Washington University in St Louis and Barnes Jewish Hospital, St Louis, MO;5. Center for Health Policy and the Olin Business School at Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, MO;6. Department of Surgery, John Cochran Veterans Affairs Medical Center, St Louis, MO;7. Department of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA;1. Department of Health Statistics, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway;2. Department of Health Management and Health Economics, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway;1. Deutsche Bundesbank, Wilhelm-Epstein-Str. 14, 60431 Frankfurt, Germany;2. Leipzig Graduate School of Management, Jahnallee 59, 04109 Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:Poor health is widely recognized as a consequence of social disadvantage, but health problems may also help transmit social disadvantage over time and generations. Experimentally assigned health exposures, namely those tested in randomized controlled trials, may provide opportunities to estimate the causal effects of health on socioeconomic status (SES). We revisit data from the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial, a randomized controlled trial of glucose control therapy in Type 1 diabetic patients, and use treatment assignment as an instrument for health status to test the causal effect of treatment-related health improvement on subsequent SES measured during the trial's follow-up study, the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications study. We used the Two-Factor Hollingshead Index of Social Position, which comprises education and occupation, to measure SES. Glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) served as a proxy for health status. Ordinary least squares (OLS) regression models showed that lower HbA1c at the trial's end was associated with higher SES at both the start of the follow-up and 17 years later. However, instrumental variable analyses showed no causal effect of HbA1c on SES, suggesting that OLS estimates are biased by endogeneity. Sensitivity analyses showed robustness to several alternate specifications. While the HbA1c advantage conferred by random assignment to treatment within the trial did not produce higher Hollingshead Index scores, we note that occupation and education categories may be harder to affect than are outcomes such as income. This analysis offers evidence that clinical trial data may be a rich and unrecognized resource for estimating health effects on SES.
Keywords:Clinical trial  Socioeconomic status  Type 1 diabetes  Health  Endogeneity
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