Handling endogeneity and nonnegativity in correlated random effects models: evidence from ambulatory expenditure
DOI10.1002/BIMJ.201400121zbMATH Open1381.62275OpenAlexW2171093924WikidataQ41033427 ScholiaQ41033427MaRDI QIDQ2802553FDOQ2802553
Authors: Antonello Maruotti, Valentina Raponi, Francesco Lagona
Publication date: 26 April 2016
Published in: Biometrical Journal (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/bimj.201400121
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two-part modelhealth care expenditurecorrelated random effects modelsendogenous selectivitymultivariate mixed-type data
Cites Work
- The geometry of mixture likelihoods: A general theory
- Generalized Additive Models for Location, Scale and Shape
- A Note About Models for Selectivity Bias
- A review of reliable maximum likelihood algorithms for semiparametric mixture models
- The geometry of mixture likelihoods, part II: The exponential family
- A zero-inflated ordered probit model, with an application to modelling tobacco consumption
- Bayesian analysis of the ordered probit model with endogenous selection
- Longitudinal analysis of repeated binary data using autoregressive and random effect modelling
- Simulated maximum likelihood estimation of multivariate mixed‐Poisson regression models, with application
- Random effect models for repeated measures of zero-inflated count data
- Two-part regression models for longitudinal zero-inflated count data
- On baseline conditions for zero-inflated longitudinal count data
- A two-part mixed-effects pattern-mixture model to handle zero-inflation and incompleteness in a longitudinal setting
Cited In (6)
- A new look at the inverse Gaussian distribution with applications to insurance and economic data
- Identification of proportionality structure with two-part models using penalization
- Fitting insurance and economic data with outliers: a flexible approach based on finite mixtures of contaminated gamma distributions
- Fairness of the national health service in Italy: a bivariate correlated random effects model
- Two-part quantile regression models for semi-continuous longitudinal data: a finite mixture approach
- Nonparametric Bayesian functional two‐part random effects model for longitudinal semicontinuous data analysis
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