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Journal Article

Citation

Qian Y, Sun Q, Fei G, Li X, Stallones L, Xiang H, Zhang X. Traffic Injury Prev. 2020; 21(1): 24-28.

Affiliation

Key Laboratory of Environmental Medicine Engineering, Ministry of Education, School of Public Health, Southeast University, Nanjing, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15389588.2019.1696963

PMID

31846600

Abstract

Objective: The present case-control study sought to explore at-risk riding behaviors associated with e-bike related traffic crashes among e-bike riders in China.Methods: Cases were recruited from residents aged 16 years and over in communities which stated "selected e-bikes as travel tools and experienced traffic crashes in the last year". Two controls for each case were randomly selected from a population of e-bike riders who had not experienced a traffic crash in the past year. The cases and controls were matched by gender, age (within 5 years) and school education level. Data were collected using questionnaires and face-to-face interviews from July 2015 to September 2015 in China. After conducting univariate logistic analysis on study variables, a conditional logistic regression model based on the 1:2 matched case-control study design was developed.Results: Multiple-factor conditional logistic regression analysis of e-bike related traffic crashes showed that running red lights (always vs. never, AOR = 3.094, 95% CI, 1.077-8.891, P <.05), riding after drinking (yes vs. no, AOR = 1.578, 95% CI, 1.102-2.259, P <.05), carrying adults while riding (always vs. never, AOR = 2.140, 95% CI, 1.273-3.595, P <.05), turning without signaling (sometimes vs. never, AOR = 1.446, 95% CI, 1.805-1.928, P <.05), riding in the motor vehicle lane (always vs. never, AOR = 2.413, 95% CI, 1.576-3.695, P <.01), prior crash history (yes vs. no, AOR = 1.670, 95% CI, 1.257-2.220, P <.05), and type of e-bikes (scooter-style e-bikes vs. bicycle-style e-bikes, AOR = 1.471, 95% CI, 1.068-2.026, P <.05) were identified as possible risk factors for e-bike traffic crashes.Conclusion: The findings of this research provide evidence about specific risky behaviors related to road traffic crashes involving e-bikes and indicated that behavioral intervention and education need to be strengthened to reduce dangerous riding behaviors. These results will be helpful for design of e-bike road risk prevention programs.


Language: en

Keywords

China; E-bikes; matched case-control study; riding behavior; traffic crashes

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