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Activity Number: 41 - Mitigating Spatial Confounding: A Modern Take
Type: Invited
Date/Time: Sunday, August 7, 2022 : 4:00 PM to 5:50 PM
Sponsor: ENAR
Abstract #319277
Title: Estimating Spatially Varying Health Effects of Wildland Firesmoke Using Mobile Health Data
Author(s): Lili James Wu and Shu Yang* and Brian James Reich and Ana Rappold
Companies: North Carolina State University and North Carolina State University and North Carolina State University and US Environmental Protection Agency
Keywords: Balancing criterion; Causal inference; Non-response instrument; Treatment heterogeneity; Smoke Sense
Abstract:

Wildland fire smoke exposures are an increasing threat to public health, and thus there is a growing need for studying the effects of protective behaviors on reducing health outcomes.  Emerging smartphone applications provide unprecedented opportunities to deliver health risk communication messages to a large number of individuals when and where they experience the exposure and subsequently study the effectiveness, but also pose novel methodological challenges. Smoke Sense, a citizen science project, provides an interactive smartphone app platform for participants to engage with information about air quality and ways to protect their health and record their won health symptoms and actions taken to reduce smoke exposure.  We propose a new, doubly robust estimator of the structural nested mean model parameter that accounts for spatially- and time-varying effects via a local estimating equation approach with geographical kernel weighting. Our results estimate how the protective behaviors’ effects vary over space and time and find that protective behaviors have more significant effects on reducing health symptoms in the Southwest than the Northwest region of the USA.


Authors who are presenting talks have a * after their name.

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