A Bayesian Multilevel Joint Modeling of Longitudinal and Survival Outcomes in Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial Studies
Yixiu Liu, Depeng Jiang, Mahmoud Torabi, Xuekui Zhang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new statistical model for analyzing mental health interventions delivered in group settings, showing that ignoring group structures leads to biased results.
Contribution
The paper introduces a multilevel joint model (MJM) that accounts for clustering in CRCTs, enabling accurate evaluation of longitudinal and survival outcomes.
Findings
The PAX program significantly improved mental health trajectories and reduced mental disorder diagnoses.
Ignoring hierarchical structures leads to biased inferences and underestimation of intervention effects.
The MJM outperformed traditional joint models in accuracy and standard error estimation.
Abstract
Cluster randomized controlled trials (CRCTs) are commonly used when interventions are delivered at the group level. Since data from CTCTs are inherently multilevel, methods that properly account for clustering are required. Joint modeling (JM) of longitudinal and survival data allows for simultaneous evaluation of intervention effects on repeated measures and time‐to‐event outcomes, offering a comprehensive view of intervention effects. However, existing JMs do not accommodate clustered data structures typically of CRCTs. This study introduces a multilevel joint model (MJM) to simultaneously evaluate intervention effects on correlated longitudinal and survival outcomes. The model was applied to empirical data from a large CRCT evaluating the PAX Good Behavior Game, a classroom‐based mental health intervention involving 4189 Grade 1 students across 313 classrooms during the 2011–2012…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychometric Methodologies and Testing · Statistical Methods and Bayesian Inference · Mental Health Research Topics
