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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2018

Causal inference to formalize responsibility analyses in road safety epidemiology

Résumé

The last few decades have seen the Structural Causal Model framework provide valuable tools to assess causal effects from observational data. In this article, we briefly review recent results regarding the recoverability of causal effects from selection biased data, and apply them to the case of responsibility analyses in road safety epidemiology. Our objective is to formally determine whether causal effects can be unbiasedly estimated through this type of analyses, when available data are restricted to severe accidents, as it is commonly the case in practice. However, because speed has a direct effect on the severity of the accident, we show that the causal odds-ratio of exposures that influence speed, such as alcohol, is not estimable. We present numerical results to illustrate our arguments, the magnitude of the bias and to discuss some recent results from real data.
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Dates et versions

hal-02354511 , version 1 (07-11-2019)
hal-02354511 , version 2 (19-04-2021)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-02354511 , version 2

Citer

Marine Dufournet, Emilie Lanoy, Jean-Louis Martin, Vivian Viallon. Causal inference to formalize responsibility analyses in road safety epidemiology. Journées GDR/SFB, Oct 2017, Bordeaux, France. 1 p. ⟨hal-02354511v2⟩
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