Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of Psychology, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, USA
  • 2 Department of Psychology, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, USA
  • 3 Department of Psychology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA
  • 4 School of Management, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  • 5 Department of Neuroscience, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Kota Bharu, Malaysia
  • 6 Department of Psychology, HELP University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
PMID: 35083797 DOI: 10.1002/cpp.2714

Abstract

The original 26-item Self-Compassion Scale (SCS; Neff, 2003) and 12-item Short-Form Self-Compassion Scale (SF-SCS; Raes et al., 2011) are scales commonly used in cross-sectional and longitudinal research to assess the global self-compassion construct and its six facets. We introduce the Single-Item Self-Compassion Scale (SISC; 'I have high self-compassion') to measure the global self-compassion construct in time-, space- and resource-limited contexts (e.g., daily diaries, experience sampling and nationally representative surveys). Additionally, the SISC will expand knowledge about self-compassion by providing researchers whose primary interest is not self-compassion with a convenient, face-valid option to measure self-compassion. Across 10 samples (four cross-sectional, four longitudinal and two 7-day daily diary; N = 2,477), we demonstrated that the SISC has acceptable psychometric properties. Specifically, the SISC was temporally consistent, correlated adequately with the SCS and SF-SCS, exhibited nearly identical correlational patterns when compared with the SCS and SF-SCS with a wide range of criterion measures (e.g., self-esteem, personality, affective and social functioning, mental health and demographic variables) and saved 12 min over a 7-day diary. Results replicated among students, community samples and across the United States, Turkey and Malaysia. Thus, we provide the field with an alternative measure of the global self-compassion construct that complements the SCS and SF-SCS.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.