Mediation Analysis: A Practitioner's Guide

Posted: 22 Mar 2016

See all articles by Tyler J. VanderWeele

Tyler J. VanderWeele

Harvard University - Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health

Date Written: March 2016

Abstract

This article provides an overview of recent developments in mediation analysis, that is, analyses used to assess the relative magnitude of different pathways and mechanisms by which an exposure may affect an outcome. Traditional approaches to mediation in the biomedical and social sciences are described. Attention is given to the confounding assumptions required for a causal interpretation of direct and indirect effect estimates. Methods from the causal inference literature to conduct mediation in the presence of exposure-mediator interactions, binary outcomes, binary mediators, and case-control study designs are presented. Sensitivity analysis techniques for unmeasured confounding and measurement error are introduced. Discussion is given to extensions to time-to-event outcomes and multiple mediators. Further flexible modeling strategies arising from the precise counterfactual definitions of direct and indirect effects are also described. The focus throughout is on methodology that is easily implementable in practice across a broad range of potential applications.

Suggested Citation

VanderWeele, Tyler J., Mediation Analysis: A Practitioner's Guide (March 2016). Annual Review of Public Health, Vol. 37, pp. 17-32, 2016, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2752938 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-032315-021402

Tyler J. Vanderweele (Contact Author)

Harvard University - Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health ( email )

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