Orlando Sentinel

E-bike hype

With their popularity soaring, studies shed light on whether e-bikes are safe or good for exercise

- By Gretchen Reynolds

Is riding an e-bike good exercise? Is riding an e-bike safe?

With interest in and sales of pedal-assisted electric bikes surging during the pandemic, those questions share a growing urgency. Two timely and soothing new studies of e-bike riders’ exertions and injuries suggest that the answer to both questions can be a qualified yes, though anyone riding an e-bike needs to remain aware that the experience is certainly cycling with a kick to it.

As most of us are likely aware, bike riding has become extremely popular and aspiration­al this year, since so many of us are otherwise housebound. Riding gets us outside, active and heading somewhere — anywhere — else. But it also involves distance, hills, wind and sometimes leaden legs, which can be daunting.

Enter e-bikes. Short for electric bikes, these are road or mountain bikes with an added batterypow­ered motor that gooses our pedaling power. Most e-bikes fall into one of three types. Class 1 e-bikes provide assistance while you pedal, up to a top speed of 20 miles per hour. Class 2 models power your ride even if you are not pedaling, but click off at 20 miles per hour. And Class 3 e-bikes assist pedaling up to a top speed of 28 miles per hour.

Given their ability to help us cover multiple miles without requiring a spousal sag wagon, e-bikes sales have soared by 70% or more each month since the pandemic began, according to industry statistics. But this popularity may carry a price.

Many of us have heard (sometimes apocryphal) stories about e-bike accidents. And some people wonder if riding an e-bike, with its pedal assistance, even counts as a workout.

On that last count, though, the first of the new studies is reassuring. Published in July in The Internatio­nal Journal of Environmen­tal Research and Public Health, it involved 101 healthy adult men and women in Hamburg, Germany, who agreed to alternate riding either a standard bicycle or an e-bike over two separate two-week periods.

Each volunteer chose his or her preferred e-bike model, with most picking road bikes having top assisted speeds of about 20 miles per hour. To compensate for the novelty factor, participan­ts spent a couple of weeks getting used to their e-bikes before the study period. The researcher­s also provided their volunteers with activity monitors, heart rate monitors and a specialize­d phone app where the riders could record their trips, distance and how physically draining each ride had felt.

The scientists did not offer their volunteers any suggestion­s, however, about where, when or how often to ride, says Hedwig Stenner, a research associate at the Institute of Sports Medicine at Hannover Medical School, who led the new study. The researcher­s wanted to see how people, on their own initiative, would use the different bikes and whether their riding would change with the e-bikes.

Electric assistance did change their habits, the researcher­s found. In general, the men and women

rode more often during the two weeks with e-bikes, averaging about five rides a week then, versus three a week with the standard cycles. Interestin­gly, the distances of most people’s rides did not budge, whichever type of bike they rode; their rides were not lengthier on the e-bikes, but they were more frequent.

Their heart rates also differed. In general, people’s heart rates were about 8% lower when they pedaled e-bikes, but still consistent­ly hovered within the range considered moderate exercise. As a result, during the two weeks when the volunteers rode e-bikes, they accumulate­d sufficient minutes of moderate physical activity to meet the standard exercise recommenda­tion of 150 minutes of moderate activity. When they rode the standard bikes, they did not.

Most also reported liking the pedal assist, Stenner says. More than two-thirds

of the participan­ts told the researcher­s they enjoyed the e-bikes and could imagine using them “for many years,” according to a final study questionna­ire.

But whether e-bikes might pose a greater risk for injuries than standard bicycles remains an open question. “No serious injuries were reported to us,” during the research, Stenner says.

The other new study of e-bikes, which was published in December in Injury Prevention, is more cautionary, however. For it, researcher­s at New York University’s School of Medicine combed a national database of emergency room visits for informatio­n about accidents related to riding a standard bicycle, motorized scooter or an e-bike from 2000 to 2017.

More than 9 million men, women and children showed up in an emergency room after being hurt while riding a standard bike dur

ing those 17 years. Another 140,000 injured themselves on scooters, and about 3,000 on e-bikes (an uncommon novelty in the early years of the study). In general, the e-bike injuries were the most severe and likely to require hospitaliz­ation.

Why e-bikers tended to hurt themselves more seriously than other riders is not clear from the injury data, says Charles DiMaggio, an injury epidemiolo­gist at NYU Langone Health, who led the new study. But speed likely played a role. “We know that e-bikes can go faster than traditiona­l pedal cycles,” he says. “And we know that increased speed often results in more severe injuries.”

But there is encouragin­g news embedded within the injury statistics, he says. In the earliest years covered by the study, a majority of e-bike injuries involved children younger than 18,

who seem to have been the earliest adopters of this new cycling technology. The incidence among this group declined precipitou­sly in the later years of the study, though, even as it rose among people aged 45 to 65. This shift could indicate that the younger riders became “more familiar” with how to ride e-bikes safely, DiMaggio says, a developmen­t that, with time and experience, should reduce injuries among other, older riders. Or the numbers could suggest that fewer young people are using e-bikes, leaving their parents or grandparen­ts to be the ones now to try out e-bikes and fall off them.

In either case, though, the study’s takeaway is clear, DiMaggio says. Before venturing out onto roads or paths on an e-bike, “familiariz­e yourself with the bike,” he says. “Wear a helmet. Follow traffic rules. Don’t drink and ride.”

 ?? TOM JAMIESON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? E-bikes are road or mountain bikes with an added battery-powered motor that increases riders’ pedaling power.
TOM JAMIESON/THE NEW YORK TIMES E-bikes are road or mountain bikes with an added battery-powered motor that increases riders’ pedaling power.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States