Alcohol Dependence Screening Tool

Measure alcohol use patterns and dependence symptoms accurately. Review scores with visual zones and guidance. Use results for screening support, not standalone diagnosis decisions.

Screening support for alcohol use patterns and dependence signals

This tool calculates a structured alcohol screening score, highlights dependence-related responses, and places the total in a practical risk zone.

Use it for screening support only. It does not replace diagnosis, urgent assessment, or personalized medical care.

Important: If someone has confusion, seizures, severe shaking, fainting, suicidal thoughts, chest pain, or trouble breathing, seek urgent medical care now.

Calculator form

Large screens show three columns, smaller screens show two, and mobile shows one.

All questions refer to the past 12 months unless noted.
Q1. How often do you have an alcoholic drink?
Domain: Consumption
Q2. On a typical drinking day, how many standard drinks do you have?
Domain: Consumption
Q3. How often do you have six or more drinks on one occasion?
Domain: Consumption
Q4. During the last year, how often was it hard to stop once you started drinking?
Domain: Dependence
Q5. During the last year, how often did drinking interfere with expected responsibilities?
Domain: Dependence
Q6. During the last year, how often did you need a morning drink after heavy drinking?
Domain: Dependence
Q7. During the last year, how often did drinking lead to guilt or remorse?
Domain: Harm
Q8. During the last year, how often were you unable to remember events after drinking?
Domain: Harm
Q9. Has your drinking injured you or someone else?
Domain: Harm
Q10. Has anyone been concerned about your drinking or suggested cutting down?
Domain: Harm
Reset

Example data table

These rows are educational examples showing how totals can map to zones.

Example Consumption Dependence Harm Total Zone Interpretation
Example A 2 0 1 3 Zone I Low risk or abstinence
Example B 6 2 3 11 Zone II Hazardous use
Example C 7 6 8 21 Zone IV Possible alcohol dependence

Formula used

Total score = sum of all 10 question scores.

Questions 1 to 8: each answer scores from 0 to 4.

Questions 9 and 10: answers score 0, 2, or 4.

Consumption subscore = Q1 + Q2 + Q3.

Dependence subscore = Q4 + Q5 + Q6.

Harm subscore = Q7 + Q8 + Q9 + Q10.

Risk zones: 0 to 7, 8 to 15, 16 to 19, and 20 to 40.

How to use this calculator

  1. Read each question and choose the answer that best matches the last 12 months.
  2. Submit the form to calculate the total score and domain subscores.
  3. Review the risk zone, dependence signal, and suggested next steps.
  4. Use the graph to compare consumption, dependence, harm, and total burden.
  5. Export the results as CSV or PDF for review, handoff, or records.

FAQs

1. What does this tool measure?

It screens alcohol use patterns, possible dependence symptoms, and alcohol-related harm. It is designed to support triage and discussion, not final diagnosis.

2. Is this a diagnosis of alcohol use disorder?

No. A diagnosis needs a clinician, history, symptom review, and sometimes additional screening or laboratory evaluation. This result is a structured warning signal only.

3. Why are there subscores?

Subscores show where risk is concentrated. Consumption reflects intake, dependence reflects loss of control and related signs, and harm reflects consequences or concern from others.

4. What does a score of 20 or more mean?

It suggests possible alcohol dependence and a need for formal assessment. It does not prove dependence, but it should prompt timely clinical review.

5. Can this be used in clinics?

It can support screening workflows, patient education, and documentation. Clinical teams should still use approved protocols, exact validated wording when required, and professional judgment.

6. Can I stop drinking suddenly after a high score?

Not always safely. People with significant dependence can develop dangerous withdrawal. A clinician should assess withdrawal risk before abrupt alcohol cessation.

7. What if someone rarely drinks but scores high on dependence questions?

That pattern still matters. Dependence-related answers can signal meaningful loss of control or morning drinking even when total consumption appears lower.

8. Why export CSV or PDF?

Exports help with recordkeeping, clinician review, referral packets, quality audits, and comparing repeat screenings over time.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.