Unfälle mit E-Bikes und Rollern führen zu mehr Hirnverletzungen. Untersuchungen ergaben, dass ein Drittel der Patienten ein Schädel-Hirn-Trauma erlitten, mehr als zwei Drittel eine Krankenhauseinweisung erforderten und etwa 30 Prozent eine Intensivbehandlung benötigten.

https://nyulangone.org/news/e-bike-and-scooter-crashes-are-leading-more-brain-injuries

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  1. The growing use of electric bikes and scooters has caused a surge in brain and spine injuries among urban riders and pedestrians, a new study shows.

    Led by NYU Langone Health researchers, the study found that these injuries now account for nearly 7 percent of trauma patients admitted into one New York City hospital.

    Published online April 15 in Neurosurgery, a publication of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons, the work analyzed 914 patients treated for injuries linked to both pedal-powered and electric micromobility devices at NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue over five years. The research team found that one-third of patients suffered traumatic brain injury, more than two-thirds required hospital admission, and roughly 30 percent needed intensive care. The share of trauma cases seen in the emergency room (whether patients were admitted or not) that involved such devices increased from less than 10 percent in 2018 to more than 50 percent by 2023.

    The most common cause of injury was a collision with a car or truck, accounting for about half of cases, said the study authors. Fewer than one-third of riders wore helmets, and this was linked to significantly higher rates of brain and facial injuries. About one in five patients tested positive for alcohol, which was tied to both worse brain injuries and lower helmet use.

    Importantly, the 69 pedestrians analyzed in the study, when struck by electric vehicles, suffered brain injuries at nearly double the rate of the riders, said the authors. Injuries peaked between 6 and 8 p.m., suggesting that heavy dinnertime e-bike delivery traffic may play a role.

    “Our study shows that micromobility injuries are producing serious brain and spinal trauma that demands neurosurgical care at a scale we haven’t seen before,” said corresponding author Hannah Weiss, MD, a resident in the Department of Neurosurgery at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. “In a busy urban setting, we are seeing more and more of these injuries firsthand. The data point to actionable solutions—helmet use, safer bike lane design, and enforcement—that could prevent many of these injuries and better protect both riders and pedestrians, who in our study often sustained even more severe brain injuries than the riders themselves.”

    https://journals.lww.com/neurosurgery/fulltext/2026/05000/the_fast_and_the_fragile__neurosurgical_trauma_in.2.aspx

  2. ResilientBiscuit on

    I wonder how this compares to the rate of motor vehicle accidents that didn’t happen because drivers were using e-bikes or scooters instead. It says the share of accidents has gone up to 7%, but that means that some other share has fallen and it doesn’t specify what else has fallen nor does it specify if the total number of accidents that it is being compared to has gone up or down in as a whole.

    Obviously there are more e-bike and scooter related TBIs because there are more e-bikes and scooters. What is more interesting is what else has happened because of that.

  3. ThinkThenPost on

    Convenience shouldn’t come at the cost of your brain. One ride, one mistake and suddenly it’s ICU. Helmets aren’t optional anymore.

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