BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
Revere2323
Fluorite | Level 6

Hello,

 

I am looking to lag the exposure to outcome by a year. What I mean by this is that for a given year in my data, I want the exposure in one year to be associated with the outcome in the next, instead of the same year. This is because I want to avoid reverse causation. 

 

So if the exposure for 1999 is 26, I would want it to match with the outcome for 2000.

 

Here is my code without the lag:

 

PROC GENMOD data=data1;
CLASS StateID year (ref=first) event (ref=first);
MODEL Outcome =Exposure confounder / DIST=poisson LINK=log TYPE3 WALD offset=lnpop; 
REPEATED SUBJECT=stateid;
run;

 

I have an offset of state population and a repeated subject on stateID. Outcome is my main outcome and exposure is my main exposure. Confounder is a confounder. I do not think that the confounder should be lagged, just the main exposure and outcome.

 

Thanks so much!

1 REPLY 1
PGStats
Opal | Level 21

You could run your analysis on table data2 given by:

 

proc sql;
create table data2 as
select 
    a.*,
    b.Exposure as lastYearExposure
from 
    data1 as a inner join 
    data1 as b on a.stateId = b.stateId and b.year = a.year-1;
quit;

(untested)

 

PG

hackathon24-white-horiz.png

The 2025 SAS Hackathon has begun!

It's finally time to hack! Remember to visit the SAS Hacker's Hub regularly for news and updates.

Latest Updates

How to Concatenate Values

Learn how use the CAT functions in SAS to join values from multiple variables into a single value.

Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.

SAS Training: Just a Click Away

 Ready to level-up your skills? Choose your own adventure.

Browse our catalog!

Discussion stats
  • 1 reply
  • 801 views
  • 0 likes
  • 2 in conversation