“…For adolescents, the SSP increased minor delinquency and substance use 2012; Struck et al, 2021;Woolley et al, 1996) or national surveys, such as the National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (Hanratty & Trzcinski, 2009;Lebihan & Mao Takongmo, 2018;Milligan & Stabile, 2011), the Canadian Community Health Survey (Brown & Tarasuk, 2019;Daley, 2017;Ionescu-Ittu et al, 2015;Lebihan & Mao Takongmo, 2019;Tarasuk et al, 2019), or the Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (Milligan & Stabile, 2007, 2011. These studies frequently used difference-in-differences methods (Ang, 2015;Baker et al, 2021;Brown & Tarasuk, 2019;Daley, 2017;Hanratty & Trzcinski, 2009;Ionescu-Ittu et al, 2015;Kim, 2014;Lebihan & Mao Takongmo, 2018;Lebihan & Mao Takongmo, 2019;Milligan, 2005;Milligan & Stabile, 2007, 2011Parent & Wang, 2007), time-series analyses (McNown & Ridao-cano, 2004), or cross-sectional (Brownell et al, 2016), repeated cross-sectional (Redelmeier et al, 2012;Tarasuk et al, 2019), or retrospective cohort (Brownell et al, 2018;Enns et al, 2019;Struck et al, 2021) designs to compare exposed individuals or populations to those unexposed to the intervention. Two studies simulated the effects of cash transfers using administrative or survey datasets (Milligan & Stabile, 2011;Woolley et al, 1996).…”