Skip to content
General News, Medical Health Aged Care

E-scooters injuries land two Sunshine Coast children in hospital every week

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health / Public Health Association of Australia 3 mins read

4 June 2025 - Public health and safety experts are calling for improved e-scooter safety regulation across Australia, after new research published today showed almost 180 young people under 16 required hospital treatment over two years on the Sunshine Coast alone. 

The report, published today in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, is the first of its kind to capture paediatric e-scooter injury data in an Australian region. Experts say these findings expose a potentially widespread and increasing cause of major injury in children. 

Researchers documented 176 paediatric e-scooter injuries in children and teens aged 5 – 15 years old attending Sunshine Coast University Hospital in 2023 and 2024. The researchers found that 1 in 10 e-scooter injuries were life threatening or potentially life threatening, while 37% of cases suffered a fracture. 

Queensland legislation allows children 12-15 to ride e-scooters if they are supervised by an adult. Speeds should be curtailed to 25km/h on roads and 12km/h on pedestrian walkways. Helmets are required and two riders (doubling) is forbidden.

Alarmingly, 42% of cases analysed in the study were children or teens who weren’t wearing a helmet at the time of their accident, 36% involved speeds greater than 25km/h and 12% involved doubling. Collisions with cars were seen in 13% of the presentations and 8% involving other e-scooters or mobility devices.

Most patients (71%) were male and the median age was 14 but ranged from 5 to 15 years.

Lead author Dr Matthew Clanfield, who worked at the Sunshine Coast University Hospital during the study period, says that he was concerned to see the frequency and range of injuries being caused by e-scooter use amongst paediatric patients.

“While working at the hospital we would see a child or teen attend the emergency department with e-scooter injury every few days.  

“The types of injuries ranged from minor fractures and injuries, through to traumatic brain injuries requiring a craniotomy. A lot of the parents attending were extremely upset to see their child hospitalised and weren’t aware how risky e-scooters can be or the legal requirement for supervision under 16. 

“It was previously uncommon to see 14 year olds in our ED as they are generally healthy, but during the two-year study period scooters were the reason for 1 in 30 emergency visits within this age group. It’s extremely concerning that young people are using these vehicles for fun and leisure and ending up in hospital as a result.”

The release of the research follows an announcement from the Queensland Government that it will hold a public inquiry into e-scooters and other mobility devices. 

Queensland and ACT are currently the only two states that allow e-scooter use under 16 years of age. Dr Clanfield is calling for a minimum age of 16 to be imposed in Queensland until safety measures are improved. 

Adjunct Prof Terry Slevin, CEO, Public Health Association of Australia, says that e-scooters are a public health and safety concern across Australia, and while use of the devices has exploded, regulation has failed to keep pace. 

“We understand that e-scooters can be a fun and convenient way to travel, but unfortunately the way they are being used now, particularly by teens and children at high speeds, are proving a genuine public health risk and injury prevention issue. 

“This study provides data in one region and in one hospital, but this is an issue in every town and city where they have landed across Australia, including in busier areas. This study found almost 180 kids were hospitalised in one regional area, at one hospital. Multiply that finding across Queensland and Australia and we are looking at thousands of preventable injuries, as well as lives lost. It is the tip of the iceberg.

“All Australian states and territories need to keep pace with the speed at which these products are taking off to protect the health and lives of young people.  Proper regulation and enforcement is the key.” 

ENDS

Media contact: Hollie Harwood, Public Health Association of Australia, 0400 762 010 or [email protected]

“Breaking bones and the rules: An audit of paediatric e-scooter trauma in a regional Queensland hospital”  has been published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health here: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anzjph.2025.100245

Please credit the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health as the source of the research.   
  
The Journal is the official publication of the Public Health Association of Australia.  
  
All articles are open access and can be found here:  https://www.journals.elsevier.com/australian-and-new-zealand-journal-of-public-health  

 

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 23/06/2025
  • 12:36
Maternity Consumer Network

Rural mums get the thumbs up for birthing

The nation has seen half of its rural maternity services close since the 1990s, which has left maternity deserts and women facing the uncertainty of birthing on the side of the road, as roadside birth creep towards 1 in every 50 births in some areas. Women in rural areas without maternity services don't just face the prospects of birthing in gravel on the side of the road, they have higher rates of preterm and stillbirths, and face the economic and psychological burden of often having to relocate many hours from home to access care and birth their children. Ten national…

  • General News, Travel Tourism
  • 23/06/2025
  • 12:36
Reflections Holidays

Tourism veteran Gray among four board appointees at Reflections Holidays

RESPECTED tourism trailblazer Lyndel Gray – current Chair of Destination Sydney Surrounds South, former CEO of the Caravan and Camping Industry Association and a…

  • Contains:
  • General News
  • 23/06/2025
  • 11:36
Buddy Pet Insurance

New pet insurance brand Buddy launches with big heart and $1 million Giving Program

Sydney, 23 June 2025 – A new pet insurance brand has officially launched in Australia, with a mission that goes beyond policies and premiums. Buddy Pet Insurance is here to protect paws, whiskers, tails – and the people who care for them. Alongside offering cover for unexpected vet bills, Buddy has committed to give $1 million through its Giving Program, which supports animal welfare, veterinary welfare, and research initiatives around the country. Since launching the program in June, Buddy has already committed $450,000 in funding, with much more to come. The Giving Program supports both animals and the dedicated professionals…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.