This disclosure asks an organisation to explain whether it has looked at the health and safety impacts of its products and services, and to report the results of that assessment in a clear, measurable way. The focus is on product and service categories, so the organisation should think about the main groups it sells or provides, rather than only isolated items or one-off cases.
In practice, the key question is how broadly the assessment has been carried out across the business. A useful report should make clear whether the review covers all relevant categories and markets, or only selected areas such as flagship products, priority lines, or specific operations. If the assessment is partial, the organisation should be transparent about what is included and what is not.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI source.
A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.
Key datapoints to prepare
How to prepare it
Request the product and service safety assessment data
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own terms first, then map them to the reporting wording. For example, if you talk about product ranges, service lines, portfolios, or customer offerings internally, use those labels in the request and only translate them afterwards for reporting.
Please provide the GRI 416-1 evidence showing the evidence needed for GRI 416:GRI 416-1.
Why it fails: It uses framework language instead of the business’s own labels, so the owner may not know which teams, systems, or category lists to pull from. It also does not specify the period, scope, significance basis, or the exact fields needed to calculate the percentage and support the figure.
Please send the tracker or export for the product and service lines your team treats as significant for [reporting period]. Use your internal category names, show which ones have had a health and safety review, and flag any improvement actions identified. Include the source system, last update date, and any exclusions so we can calculate the share of significant lines reviewed.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
Explain which product and service categories were treated as significant, and state the basis used to decide whether a category had been reviewed for possible health and safety improvements.
This figure shows how far the business has extended its safety-improvement review across the product and service portfolio, rather than the size or severity of any actual safety issue.
If the share changes, note whether this was driven by adding or removing significant categories, refining the review approach, or completing more assessments during the period.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for GRI 416-1 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
For each claim, check the evidence
Evidence pack to prepare
Common reporting gaps
Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data
Where judgement is often needed
Illustrative examples
Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.
We reviewed our main product lines and checked where health and safety effects were considered for improvement in the design or use phase. In this synthetic example, 8 of 10 significant product and service categories were covered, which is 80%. - The remaining 2 categories were not yet included in that improvement review. - This illustration is internally consistent and uses made-up figures for training only.
Illustrative only: the company first maps its important product and service groupings, then records how many of those have had health and safety effects examined with a view to improvement. The percentage is calculated from the covered categories divided by the total significant categories.
We assessed our key service offerings to see where health and safety effects had been reviewed for possible improvement. In this synthetic example, 5 of 8 significant service categories were covered, which is 63%. - The other 3 categories were outside the current review scope. - This is a fictional, internally consistent illustration for practitioner training.
Illustrative only: the organisation identifies its important service groupings and then states the share that has been examined for health and safety improvement opportunities. The percentage is the covered share rounded from the ratio of covered categories to all significant categories.
How companies report GRI 416-1
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A consumer goods business sells 12 product lines, but only 9 are treated as significant after its internal review. It has documented health and safety impact checks for 6 of those 9 lines, while the remaining 3 are still awaiting review.
A software provider offers four service bundles. Two are clearly significant and have been assessed, one is significant but the review is still in progress, and one is not significant and has not been reviewed.
A manufacturer has assessed safety effects for a product family last year, but this year it changed the design and packaging in a way that could alter the risk profile. The team is unsure whether the old assessment is enough for the current reporting period.
A retailer has a single assessment covering several closely related product ranges sold under one service arrangement. The team wants to know whether it can count each range separately or only once.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
Use it as a practitioner guide to understand the disclosure, prepare the data point on health and safety coverage, and turn that into a draft narrative and content-index line. It also points you to the workbook, evidence pack, common gaps, and illustrative examples so you can work through the disclosure in a structured way.
The page says the datapoint to prepare is health and safety coverage. Use that as the starting point for collecting the underlying information needed to describe coverage clearly and consistently in your draft.
Follow the step-by-step preparation section and use the plain-language explainer to define what you are covering before you draft. The page is designed to help you set up a practical approach rather than leaving you with a blank template.
The page is aimed at sustainability/ESG managers, HR or data owners, and assurance reviewers, so ownership should sit with the person or team that can explain the health and safety coverage data and assemble the evidence pack. Use the workbook to make responsibilities and checks easier to track.
The page says there is an evidence pack with five items for assurance readiness, and the assurance section also sets out five claims to verify with claim, risk and evidence. Use those materials together so your draft is supported by traceable evidence.
The page includes common reporting gaps and mistakes to help you spot weak drafting before sign-off. Use that section to check whether your scope, data and evidence are aligned and whether the disclosure is complete enough to support assurance.
The workbook is a downloadable .xlsx file in the Download Centre and is meant to support preparation and assurance readiness. Use it to organise the disclosure work, track the evidence pack, and move from raw data to a draft.
The Download Centre includes a printable Library Card (.pdf) alongside the workbook. Use it as a quick reference while you prepare the disclosure and check the page’s key points.
Yes, but only as a synthetic example to show how a disclosure might be presented. Use it to understand the style of the draft output and the quantitative table, then replace it with your own internally consistent data.
It includes a draft-output section with visualisation ideas, narrative starters and a GRI content-index line. That gives you a practical route from collected data to a first draft that can be reviewed and refined.
Yes, the page notes ESRS S4 (Consumers and End-users) as the closest ESRS correspondence. You can use the data you prepare here as reusable input when working across frameworks, but the page does not say the requirements are identical.
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