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E-scooter injuries at Sunshine Coast Hospital trigger calls for ban
E-scooter injuries at Sunshine Coast Hospital trigger calls for ban

ABC News

time14 hours ago

  • Health
  • ABC News

E-scooter injuries at Sunshine Coast Hospital trigger calls for ban

Parents and public health experts are calling for e-scooters to be banned for young people, with Australian-first figures highlighting the huge number of children injured or maimed while riding. The report, published today in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, is the first to measure the number and severity of e-scooter injuries affecting Australian children. It found that almost two children aged five to 15 were brought into Sunshine Coast University Hospital every week for two years. One of them was 11-year-old Gavin Boldt. Angela Boldt said an e-scooter nearly killed her son Gavin last year. On July 11, Ms Boldt picked Gavin and his 17-year-old brother up from school and dropped them home, at Buderim, before leaving to buy some groceries. "He said, 'Mum can I go for a quick scooter ride around the neighbourhood?' and we live in a cul-de-sac and it's very very safe," she said. "I said sure, 'Just make sure to pop your helmet on.'" About 20 minutes later her eldest son called saying Gavin was not moving after being thrown from his e-scooter. Ms Boldt, a nurse, had her son send her a photo to help her gauge the severity of the injuries. She said he was flown to Brisbane where doctors had to cut pieces out of his head in life-saving brain surgery. "He's got metal plates to keep his skull back," she said. Researchers recorded 176 e-scooter injuries in children and teens aged five to 15 at the Sunshine Coast University Hospital in 2023 and 2024. The average age of riders was 14 and most were male. The study one in 10 e-scooter injuries were life-threatening or potentially life-threatening, while 37 per cent of cases involved a broken bone. Riders in about 42 per cent of cases were not wearing a helmet and 36 per cent involved speeds faster than 25 kilometres per hour. One in eight cases were collisions with cars. Queensland laws allow children aged 12 to 15 to ride e-scooters if they are supervised by an adult. Speeds should be limited to 25kph on roads and 12kph on pedestrian walkways. Helmets are required and two riders (doubling) is forbidden. Lead author Matthew Clanfield, who also worked at the Sunshine Coast University Hospital during the study period, said he was concerned. "We would see a child or teen attend the emergency department with an e-scooter injury every few days," he said. Dr Clanfield said scooters were the reason for one in 30 emergency visits for 14-year-olds during the study period. "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," he said. The research follows news the Queensland government will hold a public inquiry into e-scooters. Queensland and ACT are the only two states that allow e-scooter use for those under 16 years. Dr Clanfield said he wanted anyone under 16 to be banned from riding e-scooters until safety measures were improved. Public Health Association of Australia chief executive Terry Slevin said e-scooters were a public health and safety concern across Australia, and regulation had failed to keep pace. Nine months on from his crash, Ms Boldt said Gavin was still not quite himself. "He had a large blood clot after his accident … having your 11-year-old at risk of a stroke if he gets bumped was part of our real life experience." Ms Boldt said she had seen young boys on e-scooters riding on busy Sunshine Coast roads faster than her car, without helmets, and doubling. "The speeds should be decreased and locked," she said. "There should be age limits and helmet requirements."

Children account for one in three e-scooter deaths
Children account for one in three e-scooter deaths

ABC News

time17 hours ago

  • Health
  • ABC News

Children account for one in three e-scooter deaths

Isabella Higgins: Amid a rising national death toll from e-scooter accidents, new research has found one third are children and Queensland has recorded the highest death rate amongst kids. It's now facing calls to urgently ban young people from e-scooters with doctors labelling it a public health emergency. Annie Guest reports from Brisbane. Annie Guest: When her 11-year-old son Gavin landed 30 metres from his e-scooter, Sunshine Coast mum Angela Boldt says only the neighbour's dog saw it and his barking sounded the alarm. Angela Boldt: He was in a critical condition and was on the street with a river of blood coming from his head and unconscious. Annie Guest: Gavin was airlifted to Brisbane for emergency brain surgery with doctors warning that her son was unlikely to live. Gavin survived but he's still suffering. Angela Boldt: He wasn't the same kid. Sorry. It's taken this full year and he still has post-amnesia moments. He has vision issues, he has frontal lobe damage and it's affected our entire family. Annie Guest: She'd permitted Gavin to ride in the cul-de-sac behind their house with his helmet on. It later became clear he didn't wear it and his e-scooter could go twice the 25km per hour speed limit. Only Queensland and the ACT allowed children under 16 on e-scooters. They're required to have adult supervision. Angela Boldt didn't know that. Angela Boldt: No, when we purchased this item, when we bought it, I didn't even know that there was an age restriction. You just go, "oh, it's a scooter, I see everybody else on the street with them". Annie Guest: Dr Matthew Clanfield has looked at 176 e-scooter accidents involving children who were treated at the Sunshine Coast University Hospital. In 2023 and 2024, he says many were unsupervised. Matthew Clanfield: We had half the kids not wearing helmets. We had 36% of kids admitting to going over the maximum speed limit in Queensland of 25km an hour. Annie Guest: Dr Clanfield's research is published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health. Matthew Clanfield: I can say that this is a public health emergency. Annie Guest: There's no official national tally. So, Associate Professor Milad Haghani, from the University of Melbourne searched five and a half years of media reports to find 36 deaths, one third of which were children. And more kids died in e-scooter accidents in Queensland than any other state. So Dr Clanfield and Dr Haghani are urging the Queensland Government to ban children under 16 from e-scooters immediately before there are more deaths. Queensland's Transport Minister Brent Mickelberg wasn't available, releasing a statement attributing the accidents to unsafe and unlawful riding. He pointed to the state's parliamentary inquiry into e-scooters due to report next March. Isabella Higgins: Annie Guest reporting there.

E-scooter injury toll revealed in study just ‘tip of the iceberg' in Australia, doctors warn
E-scooter injury toll revealed in study just ‘tip of the iceberg' in Australia, doctors warn

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • General
  • The Guardian

E-scooter injury toll revealed in study just ‘tip of the iceberg' in Australia, doctors warn

Every three days, a child injured on an e-scooter would come through the emergency department doors at the Sunshine Coast university hospital, according to Dr Matthew Clanfield. Between 2023 and 2024, 176 children were treated at the Queensland hospital. Some got off lucky with a scuffed knee. Others suffered life-threatening brain injuries requiring neurosurgery and psychological care. Clanfield's analysis of these injuries in under-16s treated at the hospital have been published in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health. It is the first data in Australia to capture paediatric e-scooter injuries, and it's 'only the tip of the iceberg', Clanfield said. Analysing paediatric ED triage notes, the ages of those injured ranged between five and 15 years old. One in 10 had life-threatening or potentially life-threatening injuries, and more than a third suffered at least one bone fracture. Based on self-reported data from the patients, at the time of the accidents, 42% of children were not wearing a helmet; 36% were exceeding the legal speed limit of 25 kilometres an hour for e-scooters on Queensland roads; and in 13% of cases two people were riding one scooter. Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email 'We had one child who got up to 70 kilometres an hour on an e-scooter and T-boned a car,' Clanfield said. In May, the Crisafulli LNP government announced a parliamentary inquiry into e-bike and e-scooter safety, but Clanfield's study has called for 'immediate governmental action' raising the age limit to protect children and match other states. In Queensland, children aged 12 to 15 are allowed to ride e-scooters if they are supervised by an adult riding alongside them on another device. Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory are the only jurisdictions that allow 12-year-olds to legally ride e-scooters. In New South Wales, Victoria, Western Australia and Tasmania e-scooter users must be aged at least 16. The age limit is 18 in the Northern Territory and South Australia, according to Assoc Prof Terry Slevin, the CEO of the Public Health Association of Australia. E-scooter accidents are a 'growing problem', Slevin said. But a lack of national data to identify the size of the problem and no nationally consistent rules or enforcement of those laws make it a difficult problem to solve, he said. A University of Melbourne researcher, Assoc Prof Milad Haghani, searched local news stories published between January 2020 and April 2025 to gather data on e-scooter related deaths. He identified 30 fatalities. Of those, 11 were aged under 18. Slevin said a serious problem was that children did not have a sophisticated understanding of the road rules or road safety. However, he said e-scooters were also a 'general community safety issue' because other road, footpath and cycle path users could be struck by e-scooters. Dr Sarah Whitelaw, the Australian Medical Association's federal emergency medicine representative, said the study reflected what was happening in other states and territories. Whitelaw said it was 'heartbreaking' when injured patients and their families said 'they had no idea that they could get so badly injured on an e-scooter'. 'Emergency care and trauma specialists right around Australia are increasingly concerned about the number of injuries that we're seeing with regards to children under 18,' she said. Children were 'massively over-represented' in cases of e-scooter injuries and deaths, despite e-scooters being mostly ridden by adults. Part of the problem, Whitelaw said, was that 'these devices are unfortunately marketed to kids … [and] it's not clear to parents that, in fact, in many states and territories, it's illegal to ride them outside your home on public property unless you're over 16'. She said rather than banning e-scooters, governments should improve safety laws.

Man sought after boy touched and chased in Finchampstead
Man sought after boy touched and chased in Finchampstead

BBC News

timea day ago

  • General
  • BBC News

Man sought after boy touched and chased in Finchampstead

Police have issued a CCTV image of a person they want to trace after a young boy was reportedly touched inappropriately and chased by a Valley Police said the suspect was at the sports pavilion by Finchampstead Baptist Church Centre on Gorse Ride North on Sunday at about 15:45 was reported to have touched a boy inappropriately over his clothing before chasing force said he also appeared to be taking photos and was seen approaching children aged between 10 and 11. Police are urging witnesses and anyone who recognises the man to come Sgt Pauline Cameron said: "I appreciate that local residents will be concerned to hear of this report, and would like to reassure you that we are taking this incident seriously and our enquiries are ongoing."We will be carrying out additional patrols in the area and have been working alongside local schools to make them aware of the incident and provide any necessary support." You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X, or Instagram.

6-year-old airlifted to the hospital after near-drowning: SJSO
6-year-old airlifted to the hospital after near-drowning: SJSO

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

6-year-old airlifted to the hospital after near-drowning: SJSO

A child has been hospitalized after a near-drowning in a St. Johns County neighborhood. A St. Johns County Sheriff's Office spokesperson tells us the agency responded to a drowning in the Silverleaf neighborhood. The victim was a 6-year-old, who officials say had to be airlifted to a hospital. Action News Jax is working to learn more about how the near-drowning happened and the current condition of the child. >>> STREAM ACTION NEWS JAX LIVE <<< [DOWNLOAD: Free Action News Jax app for alerts as news breaks] [SIGN UP: Action News Jax Daily Headlines Newsletter] Click here to download the free Action News Jax news and weather apps, click here to download the Action News Jax Now app for your smart TV and click here to stream Action News Jax live.

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