Published on 01 January 2020

The characteristics of dockless electric rental scooter-related injuries in a large U.S. city

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English, Kelsey C.;Allen, Justin R.;Rix, Kevin;Zane, David F.;Ziebell, Christopher M.;Brown, Carlos V. R.;Brown, Lawrence H.

Description

To describe the characteristics of dockless electric rental scooter ("e-scooter")-related injuries presenting to two emergency departments in one large U.S. city. This observational cohort study utilized the city’s public health syndromic surveillance system to prospectively identify patients with e-scooter-related injuries presenting between September and November 2018. The medical records for all adult patients treated at the two participating emergency departments were manually reviewed to extract demographic and clinical data. Cases involving mobility scooters or non-electric scooters were excluded. For the 124 included adult patients with e-scooter-related injuries, the median age was 30 years (IQR: 22-43), they were predominantly male (59.7%), and approximately half (51.6%) arrived by ambulance. Falling from the scooter (84.7%) was the most common mechanism; twelve patients (9.7%) had collided with a motor vehicle. Head and face injuries (45.5%) were common; only 2 patients (1.6%) were documented as wearing a helmet at the time of injury. Most patients (n = 112, 90.3%) required imaging, more than half (n = 78, 62.9%) required an emergency department procedure, and 26 (21.0%) required surgical intervention. Most patients were discharged home, but 35 (28.2%) were admitted to hospital. Two patients (1.6%) were admitted to the intensive care unit. E-scooters are an emerging transportation technology associated with a wide range of potentially serious injuries that consume substantial emergency department and hospital resources. Head injuries are a particular concern, as few e-scooter riders are wearing helmets at the time of injury.

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Metrics

Dataset Index

0.1

FAIR Score

13%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Transportation

Field

Social Sciences

Domain

Social Sciences

Confidence Score

96%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

BiochemistryMedicineCell BiologyBiotechnology59999 Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classifiedFOS: Earth and related environmental sciencesEcologyFOS: Biological sciencesSociologyFOS: SociologyScience Policy

Normalization Factors

FT

42.31

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00