The rapid expansion of electric scooter sharing programs may be inadvertently creating new health inequities among children. While these devices promise convenient urban mobility, emerging injury patterns reveal concerning disparities that mirror broader healthcare access issues. Analysis of over 2,100 pediatric e-scooter injuries from 2020-2024 through the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System reveals that Black and Hispanic children experience disproportionately higher injury rates compared to their population representation. The data shows males sustain 70% of injuries, with 11-14 year olds comprising the largest affected group at 38%. Most injuries involve musculoskeletal damage—fractures, dislocations, and sprains accounting for 40% of cases—followed by soft tissue injuries at 37%. The hospitalization rate reached 7.7% with a 0.3% fatality rate. These findings illuminate how emerging transportation technologies can amplify existing health disparities. The overrepresentation of minority children in e-scooter injuries likely reflects multiple factors: differential access to safety equipment, varying exposure to traffic-heavy environments where accidents occur more frequently, and potential differences in adult supervision during device use. From a public health perspective, this represents an early warning signal as e-scooter adoption accelerates nationwide. The injury patterns suggest these aren't minor scrapes but serious trauma requiring emergency care. For health-conscious parents, this data underscores the importance of protective gear and supervised use, while policymakers must consider how mobility innovations can be deployed more equitably to prevent widening health gaps among children.