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Journal Article

Citation

Ehsani JP, Eshragi AC, Hellinger A. Trauma Surg. Acute Care Open 2024; 9(1): e001396.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, The author(s) and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, Publisher BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/tsaco-2024-001396

PMID

38510533

PMCID

PMC10953031

Abstract

In their paper published in this issue of Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open, Luceri and colleagues1 document e-scooter-related traumas that were presented to an Italian Orthopedic Center emergency department during 6 months in 2021. This retrospective case review was paired with a literature review describing the nature and cause of injuries sustained from e-scooter use. Their findings offer insight into the specific mechanisms and injury sites of e-scooter-related traumas and shed light on the epidemiology of the injuries that are sustained. Their retrospective case review cannot capture exposure to e-scooter usage, which is crucial in determining risk. For example, their finding that most injuries occurred during the day may be a function of greater scooter use during those hours rather than daytime riding being riskier. The authors’ findings were largely corroborated by their literature review which found similar injury profiles among e-scooter riders across five countries. The authors conclude that while e-scooters are an inexpensive and climate-friendly mode of transport, mitigation of e-scooter injury risk is necessary through the implementation of effective policy.

E-scooters represent a new source of injury but also an opportunity for new types of interventions. Rider education, training, and laws are necessary but not sufficient to address the injury risks that are associated with e-scooter use. An emerging approach to road safety, known as safe systems, aims to eliminate road injuries through better design of the road system itself,2 creating roadways and vehicles that are inherently safe instead of relying on road users to promote safety.3 For e-scooters, a safe systems approach would modify the roadway environment to include dedicated, protected lanes for e-scooter riders. Cities regulating the use of e-scooters could use GPS monitoring systems to limit the speed a scooter can travel in high-risk areas. The National Mall in Washington, DC and Baltimore City’s Inner Harbor in the USA are examples of ‘geo-fenced’ areas where e-scooter speeds are limited to a few miles per hour to protect the safety of both the rider and the pedestrians. Recognizing that access to transportation is a social determinant of health, policymakers can also address gaps in mobility through regulations that require shared e-scooters to be distributed in a way that increases e-scooter access in underserved neighborhoods


Language: en

Keywords

Accidents, Traffic; policy; Public Health

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