
A person is considered drunk or intoxicated when he or she suffers from behavioral or psychological changes such as inappropriate sexual or aggressive behavior, mood swings, impaired judgment, impaired social or occupational functioning that develop during or shortly after alcohol consumption. Below is a list of common symptoms of intoxication:
The best way to tell if someone is intoxicated is through the amount of alcohol in his or her blood. You can purchase a breath alcohol tester to determine whether or not your BAC is abnormal. The blood-alcohol concentration (BAC) is expressed as a percentage. Here's an example:
A BAC of 0.05% means that out of 10,000 blood component parts, five parts are alcohol.
Although the effects of alcohol will vary from person to person, below is a chart from HabitSmart of the effects of increased Blood Alcohol Concentration levels.
|
BAC |
Effects on the Drinker |
|
.02 |
Relaxed feeling, less self-conscious |
|
.05 |
Increased relaxed feelings, less alert, less coordinated |
|
.08 |
Impaired coordination and judgment |
|
.10 |
Typically have embarrassing behavior, moody, slow reaction time |
|
.15 |
Drastically impaired coordination and balance |
|
.30 |
Possible to lose consciousness |
|
.40 |
Probable to lose consciousness, death is a possibility |
|
.50 |
Will lose consciousness and stop breathing, death is a strong possibility |
The U.S Department of Transportation asked states to set 0.08% as the blood alcohol concentration at which a person will be cited for drunk driving. The level of 0.08% can be typically reached by a 150lb man who consumed 3 mixed drinks and even less for women. Check with your state for its exact percentage.
If these symptoms are noticeable on a regular basis, it may be wise to purchase a breath alcohol tester to test your BAC.
References
US Department of Health and Human Services
10th Special Report to the U.S. Congress on Alcohol and Health, June 2000.
Goto Alcohol Breathalyzer, Breath Test & Analyzer Kits @Home

breath alcohol tester