HMN 2025: How e-bike injuries are surging is public-health

e-bikes

With electric bicycles (e-bikes) becoming a fixture of mobility, recreation, and commuting, a new study published in Wilderness & Environmental Medicine (WEM) offers a much-needed exploration of the injury risks associated with this fast-growing mode of transportation.

Focusing on electronic mountain biking (EMTB), the study provides detailed insights that are broadly applicable to e-bike use, addressing an important gap in public understanding of e-bike related injuries.

This research arrives at a moment of heightened attention to e-bike safety. A recent New York Times Magazine feature brought national focus to the rise in serious e-bike accidents. Notably, however, it did not reference the peer-reviewed work published in WEM, research that can help inform that broader public discussion with evidence-based context.

By providing early empirical insight into mountain e-bike injuries, the WEM study contributes valuable information that can be translated to an area where public interest is rising quickly. The authors note that e-bike injuries share a similar profile to traditional mountain bikes, but riders prevent injury and improve outcomes by wearing protective gear.

As e-bikes are increasingly incorporated into recreation and transportation networks, this study offers guidance for policymakers, transportation planners, and public-health practitioners seeking to balance the benefits of e-bike use with thoughtful approaches to rider safety.

More information

Gemma Ruddick et al, Epidemiology of Electronic Mountain Biking Injuries: An Unexplored Emerging Extreme Sport, Wilderness & Environmental Medicine (2025). DOI: 10.1177/10806032251356489

Provided by
SAGE Publications



The content is provided for information purposes only.