The median age of injured conventional bicycle riders was 30 (IQR, 13-53) years vs 39 (IQR, 25-55) years for e-bicyclists (P < .001). Scooter riders had a median age of 11 (IQR, 7-24) years at the time of injury vs 30 (IQR, 20-45) years for e-scooter riders (P < .001) (Table 1 and Figure 3). As a group, those injured from EV accidents were significantly older than those injured from conventional vehicles (age, 31 vs 27 years; P < .001) (eTable 1 in Supplement 1).
e-Bicycles have lowered barriers to cycling for older adults, a group at risk for physical inactivity.9,10 Biking has clear-cut physical and cognitive health benefits for older adults, so this extension of biking accessibility to older e-bicyclists should be considered a boon of the new technology.22,23 However, as injured e-bicycle riders are older than conventional bicyclists, the unique safety considerations for older cyclists should be a focus of ongoing study.
There is a popular conception that ebikes are ridden recklessly on streets and sidewalks by youths, doing dangerous stunts, riding against traffic, not wearing helmets, and incurring serious injury to themselves and others as a result. This conception is often used to justify legislation to restrict or ban ebike use by minors. However, the data suggests quite the opposite, as it is older riders which are racking up injuries.
The data does not support restrictions on ebikes, but rather their wholesale adoption, especially for audiences which are at risk of inactivity or disadvantaged by a lack of transportation options. Ebikes are not at odds with conventional bicycles.
The California Bicycle Coalition offers this succinct summary:
“We think this backlash against e-bikes is the wrong direction for what we want for safer ways for people biking and sharing the road,” said Jared Sanchez, the policy director for the California Bicycle Coalition. “We don’t believe that adding restrictions for people riding e-bikes is the solution.”
They also have a page on how to fight against “bikelash”, aka naysayers of bicycles and bikes: https://www.calbike.org/talking-back-to-bikelash/
I’d also add that, if after an accident you can “walk it off”, why should that even be relevant for policy decisions?
People “walk off” injuries that they should have treated all the time. You can ignore strains and sprains, but doing so may damage the body in permanent ways that come up years later.
If instead you can seen a doctor about that banged up wrist and they caught the issues you may have been able to rehab it before permanent damage was done.
Its one of the reasons “free” healthcare is so much cheaper to operate than for profit. People avoid paying for doctors visits as long as possible, which in aggregate means small, easy health problems grow into hard, expensive health problems.
In America, going to the doctor is very expensive and many younger people can’t afford basic shit like x-rays, never mind more advanced scans, treatment, surgery, etc.