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Determining the impact of legislation on paediatric all-terrain vehicle trauma and outcomes

Background/aims

Children are at higher risk of injury from all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) than adults. Legislative policy is one approach to addressing this public health issue. This study introduces a novel method for categorising state ATV legislation by strength and evaluates its impact on paediatric trauma.

Methods

ATV safety laws from all 50 states were analysed and scored using three criteria: age requirements (2 pts: >16-year old independent, >12-year old supervised; 1 pt: >16-year old independent only; 0 pts: less stringent), roadway restrictions (2 pts: no highway use; 1 pt: highway use with exceptions; 0 pts: no restrictions) and safety education (1 pt: required; 0 pts: not required). Composite scores (0–5) were categorised as strong (4–5), moderate (2–3) or weak (0–1). The Fatality Analysis Reporting System was used to calculate an 11-year average (2010–2020) adjusted paediatric ATV injury/fatality rate per state. These rates were correlated with law strength.

Results

Five states had strong laws, 28 moderate and 17 weak. The median annual-adjusted paediatric ATV injury/fatality rate was 0.84 (IQR 0.45–1.92). States with strong laws had significantly lower rates than those with moderate or weak laws (p=0.035). However, no significant correlation was found between individual composite scores and injury/fatality rates.

Conclusions

This study provides a framework for scoring paediatric ATV safety laws. States with strong laws have lower paediatric ATV trauma rates. Further analysis is needed to account for factors like population density.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 01/27/2026 | Link to this post on IFP |
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