Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Brief Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced Inventory (Brief COPE) is a well-established instrument for assessing coping strategies. Nevertheless, research has shown that it has a heterogenous factor structure, thus suggesting the need for a more economical version that considers previously identified broader factor structures. Consequently, the COPE 6 was developed as a six-item short version that measures functional coping (FC) and dysfunctional coping (DC) strategies. The aim of this study was to validate the COPE 6. METHODS: The validation sample included 961 German informal caregivers. A principal component analysis was conducted. Cronbach’s alpha and the Spearman-Brown formula were calculated to analyze reliability. The item characteristics were identified by discriminatory power and item difficulty indices. Construct validity was analyzed by testing five hypotheses. RESULTS: Two components were extracted: FC and DC. The reliability was α = .71 for the FC subscale and r(sb) = .16 for the DC subscale. The FC subscore was largely associated with the Brief COPE FC subscore and weakly associated with the Benefits of Being a Caregiver Scale score. The DC subscore showed small correlations with both the Brief COPE DC subscore and the short version of the Burden Scale for Family Caregivers score. Correlations with demographic factors and the subscales of the Social Desirability-Gamma Short Scale were negligible to small. CONCLUSION: The COPE 6 is the first theory-based adaptation of the Brief COPE to measure FC in an economical way. The FC subscale represents a valid and reliable tool for assessing FC strategies. The current form of the DC subscale appears to measure two extreme aspects of DC with insufficient convergent validity so far. Additional research is needed to develop this subscale further. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40359-025-03815-5.