Author: James H. Fowler; Seth J. Hill; Nick Obradovich; Remy Levin
Title: The Effect of Stay-at-Home Orders on COVID-19 Infections in the United States Document date: 2020_4_17
ID: 4s8unfnk_31
Snippet: With that said, we note numerous limitations in our analysis. Stay-at-home policies are ultimately assigned endogenously so we cannot say for certain that the associations we have measured are the result of a causal effect. Our tests of reverse causality suggest that stay-at-home orders influence case growth and not the other way around, but there is no way around the fact that these are observational data from which causal estimates are notoriou.....
Document: With that said, we note numerous limitations in our analysis. Stay-at-home policies are ultimately assigned endogenously so we cannot say for certain that the associations we have measured are the result of a causal effect. Our tests of reverse causality suggest that stay-at-home orders influence case growth and not the other way around, but there is no way around the fact that these are observational data from which causal estimates are notoriously difficult to obtain.
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