Articles | Open Access | https://doi.org/10.55640/eijmrms-05-05-21

The Self-Comforting and Coping Scale (SCCS): Validity and Reliability of a Measure of Self-Comforting Behaviours

Kennedy Oberhiri Obohwemu , PhD, Department of Health, Wellbeing and Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Gordon Mabengban Yakpir , PhD, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Simran Koretaine , LLM, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Ibiangake Ndioho , PhD, Department of Health and Care Management, Arden University, Manchester, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Jesse Omoregie , PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Bolton, Bolton, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Maame Ama Owusuaa-Asante , PhD, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Gabriel Abayomi , PhD, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Manchester, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Karen Henry , MSC, IBIC Change, London, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Jamila Ally , MSC, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Oluwatoyin Aderinsola Bewaji , PhD, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Manchester, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Aung Htet Sai Bo Bo , MPH, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Manchester, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Nourhan Abdelkader , MSC, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Angela Augustine , MSC, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Oluwadamilola R. Tayo , MPH, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Leeds, United Kingdom
Osinubi Olusunmola , PhD, Department of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Rupali Chauhan , MPH Faculty of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Manchester, United Kingdom
Shubham Sharma , MDS Independent Researcher, Manchester, United Kingdom
Divya Motupalli , MPHGH Faculty of Health, Wellbeing & Social Care, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Manchester, United Kingdom
Fidelis Evwiekpamare Olori , PhD, Faculty of Business Management, Oxford Brookes University, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Charles Leyman Kachitsa , PhD, Faculty of Business Management and Enterprise, Leeds Trinity University, GBS Partnership, Manchester, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Ibrahim Olanrewaju Lawal , PhD, Faculty of Business and Tourism Management, University of Suffolk, GBS Partnership, Birmingham, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Samuel Oluwatosin Adejuyitan , MSc, Doctoral Researcher, School of Business and Creative Industries, University of the West of Scotland, United Kingdom; and PENKUP Research Institute, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Reginald Ugochukwu Amanze , PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Bolton, Bolton, United Kingdom

Abstract

The present study investigated self-comforting behaviours of university students by validating and applying the Self-Comforting and Coping Scale (SCCS), a newly developed multidimensional psychometric instrument designed to measure emotional self-regulation and adaptive coping strategies. Self-comforting behaviours—including positive self-encouragement, mindfulness, cognitive reframing, and self-compassion—are essential for psychological resilience, yet few tools adequately capture these dimensions in a cohesive framework. A sample of 300 undergraduate students participated in the study to validate the SCCS and assess the prevalence of these behaviours within a higher education context.

Descriptive and inferential statistical analyses were conducted to evaluate self-comforting tendencies in the sample. A one-sample t-test revealed that the overall SCCS mean score (M = 3.25, SD = 0.72) was significantly higher than the scale's theoretical midpoint of 3.0 (t(299) = 3.47, p < 0.001), confirming that the students demonstrated a relatively high level of self-comforting behaviour. Subscale-specific analyses further supported this finding, with particularly elevated scores reported in domains such as Mindfulness and Acceptance (M = 4.5, SD = 0.6), Positive Affect/Self-Encouragement (M = 4.3, SD = 0.8), and Self-Compassion (M = 4.2, SD = 0.75). These results suggest that students not only engage in self-comforting strategies but do so consistently and with considerable effectiveness.

To validate the internal structure of the SCCS, both exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were performed. Eigenvalues for the 13 identified factors ranged from 1.2 to 7.8, collectively explaining 73.2% of the total variance, indicating that the scale captured a substantial proportion of the underlying constructs. The confirmatory factor analysis yielded standardized factor loadings ranging from 0.60 to 0.88, with minimal residuals and no significant modification indices, supporting the robustness of the proposed factor structure.

These findings affirm the SCCS as a psychometrically sound instrument and highlight the presence of strong self-comforting and coping capacities among university students. The results have implications for mental health practitioners, educators, and researchers seeking to identify and support emotionally resilient individuals in academic settings.

Keywords

Self-Comforting, Coping Strategies, Emotional Regulation, Stress Management, SCCS Validation, SCCT, Psychometric Analysis

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Kennedy Oberhiri Obohwemu, Gordon Mabengban Yakpir, Simran Koretaine, Ibiangake Ndioho, Jesse Omoregie, Maame Ama Owusuaa-Asante, Gabriel Abayomi, Karen Henry, Jamila Ally, Oluwatoyin Aderinsola Bewaji, Aung Htet Sai Bo Bo, Nourhan Abdelkader, Angela Augustine, Oluwadamilola R. Tayo, Osinubi Olusunmola, Rupali Chauhan, Shubham Sharma, Divya Motupalli, Fidelis Evwiekpamare Olori, Charles Leyman Kachitsa, Ibrahim Olanrewaju Lawal, Samuel Oluwatosin Adejuyitan, & Reginald Ugochukwu Amanze. (2025). The Self-Comforting and Coping Scale (SCCS): Validity and Reliability of a Measure of Self-Comforting Behaviours. European International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Management Studies, 5(05), 87–107. https://doi.org/10.55640/eijmrms-05-05-21