Backspin Volume 3, Issue 5 | Page 18

healthspin by Katie Sheets Using Caution on Golf Carts Is Par for the Course 18 Katie Sheets Director of Certified Programs North Oaks Medical Center As you’re navigating the fairways in your golf cart, you’re probably considering your next shot, not the fact that you’re driving a vehicle that could prove deadly. It’s easy to think of a golf cart as a grown-up toy. But, golf carts – considered allterrain vehicles – should be driven as cautiously as motorcycles or even cars. Each year, about 13,000 emergency room visits nationwide result from golf cart crashes, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Of these, about 40 percent involve children, and 50 percent involve someone falling from a moving cart. Another 10 percent involve a rollover. Because of the increased popularity in golf carts – from the country clubs to the neighborhoods – injuries have also increased. One research group reports that annual injury rates for golf carts soared 130 percent over 16 years ending in 2006. And, because of the dangers they pose, there are laws about how they should be handled, just like with cars. In the 2015 Louisiana Legislative Session, Rep. Eddie Lambert of Gonzales introduced a bill, which became law on Aug. 1, 2015. The new law: • Prohibits the use of golf carts on most public roads. Exceptions include college campuses and state highways that intersect golf courses • Requires registration of a golf cart with the Office of Motor Vehicles as an off-road vehicle and requires display of a decal issued by the OMV • Restricts operation of a golf cart to a person with a valid driver’s license • Requires the owner of a golf course to have liability insurance. The laws are intended to help prevent crashes like the one involving a 16-yearold golf bag room attendant who was fatally injured while driving a golf cart. On Sept. 16, 2000, the Massachusetts boy hit a deck that sheared off the steering wheel, with the cart continuing forward and crushing his chest, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Just a few months ago, a 6-year-old Texas girl was killed when the golf cart in which she was riding overturned. The driver, an 8-year-old boy, was turning when the golf cart toppled over and trapped the girl under the cart. While traversing the course, remember that the most dangerous area of the cart path is on the slopes. One crash claimed the life of an Indiana woman who was changing seats with her companion while headed down a steep hill.