Abstract
Objective
Over the past few years, increased e-scooter ridership has raised concerns about the growing number of injury accidents involving e-scooters. Additionally, given the lack of appropriate e-scooter accident data, the extent to which built environment and socioeconomic factors affect e-scooter safety is unclear. In consideration of these issues, this study was aimed at identifying the factors contributing to the number of e-scooter injury accidents in Austin.
Methods
We developed zero-inflated Poisson (ZIP) and zero-inflated negative binomial (ZINB) models on the basis of 2018 dockless e-scooter injury accident data collected from the Patch platform. The results indicated that the ZIP model better fit the accident data.
Results
Significant variables included the ratio of 18- to 34-year-old males to their female counterparts, the median annual household income (in thousands), the ratio of public transport users to private transport users, the land use entropy index, the percentage of restaurants, and the percentage of educational centers in the study site.
Conclusions
As e-scooter accidents are likely to occur in dense urban settings, a critical initiative is to develop new infrastructure, such as bike lanes, and/or extend sidewalks beyond core urban areas. Another highly recommended measure is to implement a demerit point system for the suspension of riders who engage in unsafe behaviors. Lastly, launching educational campaigns by e-scooter operators and law enforcement agencies will raise riders’ awareness about road and personal safety.
Acknowledgment
This work was supported by University of Texas good system grand challenge and USDOT CM2 University Transportation Center at University of Texas Austin.