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Drunk Driving Behavior and Prevention Attitudes Survey

Explores how people actually decide whether to drive after drinking — the alternatives they use, the barriers that get in the way, and how risky they think it really is. Built for road-safety agencies, employers, bars, and rideshare or insurance programs designing prevention campaigns. An AI follow-up interview reconstructs the last real decision point instead of hypothetical good intentions.

Sample questions

A preview of what’s in the template. Every question is editable before you launch.

13 questions · ~7 min
Q01
Message

Thanks for taking part in this research on drinking and driving decisions. Your answers are anonymous and help improve safe-ride options and prevention programs in your community. It takes about 5-6 minutes, and there are no wrong answers — honesty is what makes this useful.

Q02
Multiple ChoiceRequired

In the last 12 months, how often have you driven a vehicle within 2 hours of drinking alcohol?

  • Never
  • Once
  • 2-3 times
  • 4-6 times
  • 7 or more times
  • Prefer not to answer
Q03
Multiple Choice

When you'd had a drink and needed a ride, which of these have you actually used in the last 12 months?

  • Called a taxi or rideshare
  • Asked a sober friend or family member to drive
  • Used public transit
  • Stayed overnight where I was
  • Arranged a designated driver in advance
  • Drove myself
  • Other
Q04
Multiple Choice

What has stopped you from arranging a sober ride on a night you'd been drinking?

  • Cost of a rideshare or taxi
  • No safe-ride option available where I was
  • Didn't think I was too impaired to drive
  • The distance was short
  • Didn't want to leave my car overnight
  • Forgot to plan ahead
  • Other
Q05
Opinion ScaleRequired

How much personal risk do you think there is in driving after 2-3 alcoholic drinks?

Scale: 010
Min:No risk at allMax:Extreme risk
Q06
Matrix

How much do you agree or disagree with each statement?

4 rows × 5 columns
  • I can reliably tell when I'm too impaired to drive
  • Drunk driving laws are strictly enforced where I live
  • Rideshare apps have made drunk driving less common among people I know
  • Friends around me would stop someone from driving after heavy drinking
Columns: Strongly disagree · Disagree · Neutral · Agree · Strongly agree
Q07
Rating Scale

How would you rate the availability of safe-ride options (rideshare, transit, designated-driver programs) late at night in your area?

Range: 15
Min:Very poorMax:Excellent
Q08
Multiple Choice

How often do you personally drive a vehicle in a typical week?

  • Daily
  • A few times a week
  • About once a week
  • A few times a month
  • Rarely or never
Q09
Best–Worst Trade-off (MaxDiff)

Which of the following would most and least effectively stop you from driving after drinking?

  • Free or discounted rideshare vouchers
  • Stricter police checkpoints
  • Higher fines or license suspension risk
  • A trusted friend offering a ride
  • Employer-sponsored safe-ride program
  • Public awareness campaigns
  • Ignition interlock requirements
Pick best & worst per setBest:Most effectiveWorst:Least effective
Q10
AI Interview

Reconstruct the most recent time the respondent actually had to decide whether to drive after drinking: how many drinks, how they judged their own impairment, what alternatives they considered, and why they ended up driving or not. If they said cost or lack of options was a barrier, probe what specific option would have changed their decision. If they claim they always use alternatives, pressure-test with a specific recent example rather than accepting the general claim.

Q11
Multiple Choice

What is your age range?

  • Under 21
  • 21-29
  • 30-44
  • 45-59
  • 60 or older
  • Prefer not to say
Q12
Multiple Choice

How do you describe your gender?

  • Woman
  • Man
  • Non-binary
  • Prefer to self-describe
  • Prefer not to say
Q13
Message

That's everything — thank you for your honesty. Your responses will be combined with others to help shape safe-ride programs and prevention efforts, and no individual answers will be shared or identified.

What’s included

  • AI follow-ups

    Adaptive probes on open-ended answers that pull out detail a static form would miss.

  • Attention checks

    Built-in safeguards against rushed answers and low-quality respondents.

  • AI-drafted copy

    Wording, ordering, and branching written by the AI — tuned to your research goal.

  • Auto report

    Themes, quotes, and a plain-English summary write themselves once responses come in.

How it compares

We reviewed the closest templates from other survey tools. Here’s what they do well — and where this template goes further.

Why this template

  • Includes an AI follow-up interview that reconstructs the respondent's actual last decision point about driving after drinking, rather than relying on hypothetical questions
  • Combines standard multiple-choice and matrix/rating questions on driving frequency, sober-ride usage, and perceived risk with a max-diff exercise to rank which deterrents actually work
  • Automated per-response quality scoring and auto-generated reports mean road-safety agencies, employers, and rideshare/insurance programs get analysis-ready output without manual coding
  • Transparent prompts let organizations see and audit exactly how the AI probes sensitive drinking-and-driving admissions, supporting research integrity

QuestionPro

Drunk Driving Survey Questions + Sample Questionnaire Template

This is a directly comparable static survey template covering drunk driving attitudes and behaviors, built on QuestionPro's traditional survey platform. It offers a ready-made question bank for researchers who want a quick starting point rather than a fully custom instrument. It does not appear to include any adaptive interviewing or voice-based follow-up capability.

What it does well

  • Provides a pre-written, ready-to-field question set specifically on drunk driving attitudes
  • Backed by an established, well-known survey platform with broad distribution and analytics tooling
  • Likely easy to customize using standard question-editing tools familiar to survey researchers

Where it falls short

  • Static question list with no adaptive AI follow-up to probe deeper into a respondent's actual last decision point
  • No voice AI interview or guided screen-share task option for richer behavioral reconstruction
  • No published methodology or transparent prompt logic for how questions were derived or scored

Ready to launch?

Open this template in the editor. Every part is yours to change before the first respondent sees it.