Litcius/Paper detail

Electric bicycles (e-bikes) are an increasingly common pediatric public health problem

Laura F. Goodman, Zoe Flyer, John Schomberg, Mary Maginas, Elizabeth Wallace, Olivia Vukcevich, Saeed Awan, David Gibbs, Jeffry Nahmias, Yigit S. Guner

2023Surgery Open Science23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose: Electric bicycles (e-bikes) achieve higher speeds than pedal bicycles, but few studies have investigated the impact on injury rates specific to the pediatric population. Utilizing the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS), we compared rates of pediatric injury for e-bikes, bicycles, and gas-engine bicycles (mopeds) from 2011 to 2020. Methods: Descriptive and bivariate inferential analyses were performed upon NEISS estimates of e-bike, bicycle, and moped injuries in children aged 2-18 years. Analyses were stratified by patient age and helmet usage. The Mann-Kendall test of trends was used. Results: = 0.06, p = 0.85). Males accounted for 82.5 % of e-bike injuries. The age group most commonly affected by e-bike injury (44.3 %) was 10-13 years old. The proportion of injuries requiring hospitalization was significantly higher for e-bikes (11.5 %), compared to moped and bicycle (7.0 and 4.8 %, respectively, p < 0.0001). In cases where helmet use or absence was reported, 97.3 % of e-bike riders were without a helmet at the time of injury, compared to 82.1 % of pedal bicycle riders and 87.2 % of moped riders. Conclusions: The rate of pediatric e-bike injuries increased over the study period. Compared to riders on pedal bicycles or mopeds, children on e-bikes had infrequent helmet use and increased rate of hospitalization. These findings suggest that attention to e-bike safety and increasing helmet usage are important to public health among the pediatric population. Level of evidence: IV.

Topics & Concepts

Injury surveillanceInjury preventionMedicinePoison controlOccupational safety and healthHuman factors and ergonomicsPopulationIncidence (geometry)Suicide preventionCyclingMedical emergencyEnvironmental healthGeographyPhysicsPathologyArchaeologyOpticsInjury Epidemiology and PreventionAgriculture and Farm SafetyTraffic and Road Safety