EPISODE · May 22, 2026 · 16 MIN
Ep 212 - Scooters, Skinned Knees, and the Rest of the Story (E-Scooter Injuries & OSH)
from Prove It To Me - Real Research, Real Data, No BS · host Dr. Matt Law
Electric scooters have taken over our sidewalks, our bushes, and our commutes. In this #StudyFinds episode of #ProveItPod, we dive into a recent news brief from Safety and Health Magazine highlighted a study on pediatric e-scooter injuries, focusing heavily on boys getting hurt and the need for helmets. But a 300-word news brief can only tell you so much. Dr. Matt Law pulls the original Johns Hopkins study to find the rest of the story: socioeconomic disparities, infrastructure failures, and the massive limitations of national injury databases. We break down the real data and how pediatric scooter injuries tie directly into Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) for last-mile commuting and corporate campus mobility. Key Takeaways: The Highlight Reel vs. The Full Game: Trade magazines are fantastic for quick awareness, but safety professionals must read the primary source to catch the nuance—like the fact that the study didn't actually track helmet usage! The Demographics of Danger: The primary focus of the original study was actually on health equity and how poor urban infrastructure disproportionately impacts certain demographics. Campus Mobility Nightmares: If your company provides e-scooters for employees to get across campus, you aren't just providing a perk—you are adopting a massive occupational hazard that requires strict governance and environmental engineering. References: Howard, M. B., Prichett, L., & Cohen, J. S. (2026). Disparities in incidence and severity of electric scooter injuries in children. Injury, 57, Article 113175. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.injury.2026.113175 S+H Staff. (2026, May 7). Younger boys are most likely to be injured on e-scooters, study finds. Safety and Health Magazine. https://www.safetyandhealthmagazine.com/younger-boys-are-most-likely-to-be-injured-on-e-scooters-study-finds/
What this episode covers
Electric scooters have taken over our sidewalks, our bushes, and our commutes. In this #StudyFinds episode of #ProveItPod, we dive into a recent news brief from Safety and Health Magazine highlighted a study on pediatric e-scooter injuries, focusing heavily on boys getting hurt and the need for helmets. But a 300-word news brief can only tell you so much. Dr. Matt Law pulls the original Johns Hopkins study to find the rest of the story: socioeconomic disparities, infrastructure failures, and the massive limitations of national injury databases. We break down the real data and how pediatric scooter injuries tie directly into Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) for last-mile commuting and corporate campus mobility. Key Takeaways: The Highlight Reel vs. The Full Game: Trade magazines are fantastic for quick awareness, but safety professionals must read the primary source to catch the nuance—like the fact that the study didn't actually track helmet usage! The Demographics of Danger: The primary focus of the original study was actually on health equity and how poor urban infrastructure disproportionately impacts certain demographics. Campus Mobility Nightmares: If your company provides e-scooters for employees to get across campus, you aren't just providing a perk—you are adopting a massive occupational hazard that requires strict governance and environmental engineering. References: Howard, M. B., Prichett, L., & Cohen, J. S. (2026). Disparities in incidence and severity of electric scooter injuries in children. Injury, 57, Article 113175. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.injury.2026.113175 S+H Staff. (2026, May 7). Younger boys are most likely to be injured on e-scooters, study finds. Safety and Health Magazine. https://www.safetyandhealthmagazine.com/younger-boys-are-most-likely-to-be-injured-on-e-scooters-study-finds/
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Ep 212 - Scooters, Skinned Knees, and the Rest of the Story (E-Scooter Injuries & OSH)
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