I would second the advice to get immediately involved with the PHP of your state. They will probably strongly advise you / "make" you get an approved assessment for alcoholism. Do it and please have an open mind. Many people go to be assessed and are in denial for quite a while. If it was really a one time mistake, then PLEASE GET A SECOND OPINION and consider consulting a lawyer. It will save you a whole lotta trouble later.
The PHP's job is to catch people before they destroy their lives and therefore they have an extremely dubious attitude toward anyone that presents to them. Let's face it...many addicts are habitual liars and these professionals get extremely jaded.
My personal story is this: I never have been arrested or gotten a DUI (I drove slightly intoxicated once and it really scared me). My typical drinking would be very sporadic. At the most it was one 12oz. beer every other day or so (on personal time, of course), and get fairly drunk after exams. I never, ever saw patients or even went to any class/to school with even a hint of alcohol in my system. I was in third year on IM rotation and got drunk on a Saturday night. I had a horrible hangover and arrived late to 10am rounds on Sunday morning. I was extremely paranoid, thinking that maybe I smelled of alcohol and would be reported. Naively, I thought that "self reporting" would be in my best interest. I told my attending (who really didn't care), and stupidly sent an email to a 4th year student to apologize. She kicked it up to administration and therefore it had to be 'dealt with.' I was sent to an alcohol assessment at Bradford in Birmingham.
Again, because I am naive, I told them absolutely everything about all alcohol use. I do not recommend intentionally withholding info during the assessment. However, it is imperative to realize that there is the mindset of guilty until proven innocent, and anything you say can and will be used against you in the court of treatment facility team. I strongly do not recommend going to Bradford for anything. People DO get sober there, but the program is very malignant in general, which is from personal experience and from friends who have completed treatment there.
Bradford recommended inpatient treatment. After 90 days of easy sobriety on my own, I went to MARR in Atlanta instead, which was in general a very good program. It cost over $24,000 for 90 days of treatment, which is actually as cheap as it gets.
Now I have five years of monitoring. This includes calling into a random drug screen service every single day, three AA meetings a week, and a group therapy meeting once a week.
I have lost a year of school, and have the stigma of being an alcoholic. After 90 days of inpatient treatment, 7 mos. of easy sobriety, and countless AA meetings, I still don't believe I am an alcoholic -I must have pathological denial 🙂! In all reality, I am still very afraid of my life potentially going that direction.
Take home is get to the PHP, get a second opinion/lawyer if needed, and be very open to the possibility that alcohol is a serious issue. I have come to know many people in healthcare whose lives have been absolutely wrecked by addiction. It's not something to mess with! But if it is not an issue, I hope my absolutely horrible experience will give some non-alcoholic one-time screw-ups some grace!