Choosing an Analytic Approach

Key Study Design Considerations in State Policy Evaluation

Elizabeth Stone, Megan S. Schuler, Elizabeth A. Stuart, Max Rubinstein, Max Griswold, Bradley D. Stein, Beth Ann Griffin

ResearchPosted on rand.org Mar 30, 2026Published in: Health Services and Outcomes Research Methodology, Volume 26, pages 3-25 (March 2026). DOI: 10.1007/s10742-025-00369-2

This paper reviews and details methods for state policy evaluation to guide selection of a research approach, based on an evaluation’s setting and available data. We highlight key design considerations for an analysis, including treatment and control group selection, timing of policy adoption, expected effect heterogeneity, and data considerations. We then provide an overview of analytic approaches and differentiate between methods based on an evaluation’s context, such as settings with no control units, a single treated unit, multiple treated units, or with multiple treatment cohorts. Methods discussed include: interrupted time series models, difference-in-differences estimators, autoregressive models, and synthetic control methods, along with method extensions which address issues like staggered policy adoption and heterogenous treatment effects. We end with an illustrative example, applying the developed framework to evaluate the impacts of state-level naloxone standing order policies on overdose rates. Overall, we provide researchers with an approach for deciding on methods for state policy evaluations, which can be used to select study designs and inform methodological choices.

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Document Details

  • Publisher: Springer Nature
  • Availability: Non-RAND
  • Year: 2026
  • Pages: 23
  • Document Number: EP-71289

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