Helmet (Health impact of e-bikes and e-scooters) study: Data collection methods and information gathered for the evaluation of the introduction of share hire schemes

Miranda E G Armstrong*, James D W Garbutt, Tim Jones, Ben Spencer, Ian Philips, Sabina Sanghera, Lesley Welch, Rayne Roberts, Frank de Vocht , Russ Jago, Ruth E Salway

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)

Abstract

Background
This study aimed to collect information on e-bike and e-scooter use in areas with and without e-bike (EB) and e-bike plus e-scooter (EB+ES) combined share-hire schemes.

Methods
This study employed a repeated cross-sectional design. An online survey asking questions about demographics, travel, and health was completed by people in August and September 2023 before the schemes were launched in Bristol (EB+ES) and Leeds (EB), with Bradford and Sheffield as control sites. A resurvey was conducted at the same sites one year later, but also in Bath (EB+ES) and Plymouth (EB). We also interviewed eight e-bike and e-scooter users and non-users of Bristol (n=4) and Leeds (n=4).

Results
Following data cleaning, 3771 remained in the baseline sample and 5370 remained in the resurvey sample. The majority of participants reported having never used an e-bike (baseline: 61%; resurvey: 69%) or e-scooter (baseline: 77%; resurvey: 84%). At baseline, the most common e-bike access route was the use of their own e-bike (45%), with access via a share-hire scheme lower at 25%. In the resurvey sample, access levels were similar via a share-hire scheme (38%) and personal e-bikes (36%). The most common e-scooter access route was a share-hire scheme (baseline: 60%; resurvey: 74%). The most common weekly e-bike and e-scooter destinations were leisure/leisure venues, followed by work/education and shopping/errands.
Half said they would not use an e-bike scheme and 63% indicated they would not use an e-scooter scheme. Potential users were willing to walk ~500 m to access an e-bike/e-scooter.
Interviewees generally supported share-hire schemes, seeing them as a good addition to the wider transport offer, but with more support for e-bikes and reservations around e-scooters.

Conclusions
These data will be important for a later evaluation of EB and EB+ES share-hire schemes on public health, social, economic, and environmental factors.
Original languageEnglish
Article number44
JournalNIHR Open Research
Volume5
DOIs
Publication statusSubmitted - 7 May 2025

Research Groups and Themes

  • SPS Exercise, Nutrition and Health Sciences

Keywords

  • e-bike
  • e-scooter
  • natural experiment
  • physical activity
  • e-bike share-hire
  • e-scooter share-hire

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