Validating and Adapting the Brief Resilient Coping Scale for Greek Humanitarian Workers
M. Bakola, S. Reppas, A. K. Sakaretsanou, K. S. Kitsou, N. Vaitsis, S. Angelakou-Vaitsi, K. Mavridou, A. Veizis, P. Gourzis, E. Jelastopulu

TL;DR
This study validated a Greek version of a stress coping scale for humanitarian workers, showing it is reliable and useful for assessing their resilience.
Contribution
The study validated and adapted the Brief Resilient Coping Scale for Greek humanitarian workers.
Findings
The Greek version of the BRCS showed good internal consistency with a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.84.
Confirmatory Factor Analysis supported the one-factor structure of the BRCS with strong fit indices.
34.6% of participants were classified as low resilient copers, 38.6% as medium, and 26.8% as high resilient copers.
Abstract
Humanitarian workers (HWs) face significant challenges while providing aid to those in need, often leading to psychological exhaustion and the risk of primary or secondary trauma. Our study aimed to validate and adapt the Greek version of the Brief Resilient Coping Scale (BRCS) for HWs in Greece. We conducted a cross-sectional study between September and December 2022. Participants were recruited through a self-administered questionnaire distributed via social media to humanitarian groups. Additionally, the questionnaire was sent via email to these groups’ members, who then forwarded it to their respective networks. The questionnaire included the BRCS, a 4-item measure designed to capture tendencies to cope with stress in a highly adaptive manner. A score of 4-13 points indicates low resilient copers, 14-16 points medium resilient copers and 17-20 points high resilient copers.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsResilience and Mental Health
