Mass-produced civilian hardware
Your escape pods are mass-produced, cheapest-source products. Escape pods are one of those things that, ideally, are never used and need a long shelf-life. Nobody wants to spend expensive man-hours constantly inspecting and, if necessary, maintaining an enormous numbers of pods.
Because of this, three factors emerge as priorities in escape pod design: reliability, simplicity, and cost.
Now, with this in mind:
No operable door simplifies the mechanism. If you have a door that can be opened and closed at will, you need hinges, locking bolts, gaskets, etc. These need to be lubricated and add cost and complexity to the design. These also make the pods more expensive, which nobody wants.
No operable door keeps the inhabitant safe from themselves. Statistically, half of all people have less-than-average intelligence. In an emergency situation, this gets even worse. If the doors were made so that they could open at will, there would be people who'd simply open them in space, which would kill them. Especially considering that most users of these pods might be completely untrained tourists, who have no clue what they are doing.
There is no reason for the inhabitant to ever open the door. Excepting the rare, rare case where an emergency pod ends up not only on the surface of a planet, but also one that has a breathable atmosphere, there will basically never be a survivable atmosphere outside of an escape pod. In >99.99 percent of cases, the emergency pod will be floating around in vacuum, until a rescue ship comes by who have the requisite can-opener that they can use to open the pod.
Un-openable pods
With these factors in mind, I suggest a (civilian) pod design that seals once and then can't be opened without a "can opener" type tool or some sort of cutter. In order to seal the pod, a one-time reaction occurs: maybe the pods all have a lid that closes, and then a powerful two-part adhesive seals it or some pyrotechnic automatic welding line quickly welds the escape pod airtight.
This has multiple advantages. For example, a chemical-energy solution would work regardless of power failure or even consciousness of capsule inhabitant. Hypothetically, a crew member could toss an unconscious passenger in one and then close the lid or pull some sort of tab to automatically start the chemical welding or gluing process. They don't need to fiddle with levers, handles, or wheels and it seals completely unattended.
I think that "non-civilian" grade escape pods would be different though, because you need far less of them, you can make sure the crew are trained to use them, and there might be cases where someone who's wearing a sealed suit is inside one, so they could hypothetically open it without being killed immediately.
Extra
Personally, I'm skeptical that a single-occupant life-pod makes much sense in most spaceship scenarios. If you look at similar equipment today, you'll almost never find a single-person life-boat: most are designed for many passengers at the same time. The main reason behind this is because the "threshold of effort" between making a one-person system and making one which can hold multiple people is not that high.
Specifically, to expand your escape pod from a one-person solution to one designed for two people, hardly any changes need to be made. A bit more volume, and maybe a bit more food/water/o2, but you don't need an entirely new craft's worth of material and supply.
I think a better solution would be something analogous to life vests today: something unobtrusive that everyone can wear at all times, that, while not a permanent solution, will save you for long enough to be rescued if your suddenly thrown into space. For example, this could be a shipboard jumpsuit that, in a pinch, has a hood you can zip up and a small gas-canister that will pressurize it and keep you safe for an hour or two.