Given that most effective alcohol harm-reduction laws specify the blood alcohol  concentration (BAC) that constitutes illegal behavior (e.g., the .08% breath  alcohol concentration legal limit), interventions that allow drinkers to  accurately estimate their BACs, and thus better assess their risk, have  potential importance to long-term driving-under-the-influence prevention  efforts. 
This study describes a field experiment designed to test the impact on  drinking of providing "Know Your Limit" (KYL) BAC estimation cards to  individuals in a natural drinking environment. 
We randomly sampled 1,215  U.S. residents as they entered Mexico for a night of drinking, interviewed them,  and randomly assigned them to one of six experimental conditions. Participants  were reinterviewed and breath-tested when they returned to the United States.  The experimental conditions included providing generic warnings about drinking  and driving, giving out gender-specific BAC calculator cards (KYL cards), and  providing incentives to moderate their drinking. 
Cueing participants  about the risks of drunk driving resulted in significantly lower BACs (relative  to control) for participants who indicated that they would drive home. Providing  KYL matrixes did not reduce BACs, and, in fact, some evidence suggests that KYL  cards undermined the effect of the warning. 
KYL information does  not appear to be an effective tool for reducing drinking and driving.  Implications for prevention and future research are discussed.
Request Reprint E-Mail: jdclapp@mail.sdsu.edu  
 
