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CSRD and the Health Sector: How to Capture Workforce and Diversity Data

The health and social care sector is people-centred — your workforce is not only your biggest asset, but also the heart of your sustainability performance. Under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the Voluntary Sustainability Reporting Standard for SMEs (VSME), care homes, clinics, and health service providers are expected to include key information on workforce structure, diversity, wellbeing, and development in their sustainability disclosures.

This guide explains how SME healthcare organisations can collect and report this information effectively, using simple HR data and existing staff records — no consultant or software system required. For related guidance, see the CSRD guide for care homes and clinics and how to calculate gender pay gap.


Why Workforce and Diversity Reporting Matters

The CSRD expands sustainability reporting beyond environmental data. For health and care organisations, social indicators are especially important because they reflect:

  • Employee welfare and retention
  • Equality, diversity, and inclusion in caregiving roles
  • Staff training and career progression
  • Organisational values and reputation

The VSME Standard mirrors this emphasis in its Social Modules (S1–S4):

  • S1: Working conditions and employment
  • S2: Equal treatment and opportunities
  • S3: Health, safety, and wellbeing
  • S4: Training and skills development

Together, these provide a compact but powerful framework for people-focused sustainability reporting.


Step-by-Step: Capturing Workforce Data

Step 1 – Gather Core Employment Data

Start with information you already hold in your HR or payroll system. Typical data points include:

  • Total employees (headcount and full-time equivalents)
  • Employment type (full-time, part-time, temporary, agency)
  • Gender balance
  • Age profile (optional but useful)
  • Staff turnover and absenteeism rates

Example:

80 employees (65 FTEs), 78% female, 22% male, 15% part-time, 12% annual turnover.


Step 2 – Identify Key Workforce Indicators

IndicatorDescriptionSource
Headcount and FTEsTotal staff numbers and full-time equivalentHR or payroll records
Gender balance% female, male, non-binaryHR system or staff survey
Contract typesPermanent vs. temporaryEmployment records
Turnover and retention% of staff leaving annuallyHR/payroll
AbsenteeismAverage sick days per employeeHR or health records

These can be compiled annually using your existing HR reporting schedule.


Step 3 – Report in VSME Format (S1 – Working Conditions)

IndicatorUnit20242025 (target)
Total employeesnumber8082
% female employees%7880
% part-time staff%1514
Staff turnover%1210
Absenteeismdays/employee87

Narrative:

“Staff turnover decreased through improved working conditions and flexible scheduling. The organisation maintains gender balance reflective of the sector and invests in continuous staff wellbeing programmes.”


Step-by-Step: Capturing Diversity and Inclusion Data

Step 1 – Define What Diversity Means for Your Organisation

Under VSME S2 (Equal Treatment and Opportunities), SMEs are encouraged to consider diversity broadly — not just gender, but also:

  • Age distribution
  • Nationality or ethnic background (where legally collectable)
  • Disability and accessibility
  • Representation in management roles

You don’t need to collect sensitive personal data. Instead, focus on:

  • Policies in place (e.g. equal opportunities, anti-discrimination)
  • Outcomes you can measure (e.g. % of women in leadership roles)

Step 2 – Use Anonymous and Voluntary Data Collection

You can collect diversity data through:

  • Anonymous staff surveys (simple, voluntary, and GDPR-compliant)
  • HR onboarding forms (where appropriate)
  • Regular policy reviews and training participation records

Always explain why the data is being collected and how it supports fair treatment.


Step 3 – Report Diversity and Inclusion Data (S2)

IndicatorUnit20242025 (target)
% women in management%6265
% staff under 30%1820
% staff over 55%2223
Inclusion or equality policyYes/NoYesYes
Diversity training participation%80100

Narrative:

“Diversity and inclusion are central to our care culture. Women represent 62% of management positions, and all employees receive equality and inclusion training.”


Step-by-Step: Capturing Health, Safety, and Wellbeing Data

Step 1 – Track Existing Safety Metrics

The VSME S3 (Health, Safety, and Wellbeing) section expects SMEs to disclose basic safety data such as:

  • Reported workplace incidents
  • Lost-time injuries
  • Absence due to work-related stress or illness

Example:

“Two minor workplace incidents were recorded in 2024, with zero lost-time injuries. Monthly wellbeing check-ins introduced for all staff.”

Step 2 – Include Preventive Measures

You can describe your approach qualitatively:

“Staff receive annual manual-handling training and mental health support. An internal safety committee meets quarterly to review incidents.”


Step-by-Step: Capturing Training and Development Data

Step 1 – Identify What You Already Track

Most care organisations already track training for compliance (e.g. first aid, safeguarding, infection control). Include this as part of VSME S4 – Training and Skills.

IndicatorUnit20242025 (target)
Average training hours per employeehours1012
% of staff completing mandatory training%100100
% of staff in career development programmes%3545

Narrative:

“Each employee receives at least 10 hours of training annually. A new mentorship scheme supports early-career carers and nurses.”


Integrating Workforce and Diversity into One Disclosure

SectionTopicExample Data
S1 – Working ConditionsEmployment, turnover, absenteeism80 staff, 12% turnover
S2 – Diversity and InclusionEqual treatment and training62% women in management
S3 – Health and SafetyIncidents, wellbeing policies0 lost-time injuries
S4 – Training and SkillsHours of training, career pathways10h average training per person

These disclosures can be added as one short section in your annual CSRD or sustainability statement.


Practical Tips for Care SMEs

  • Use existing HR tools: Payroll or rota systems already capture most data you need.
  • Keep reporting light: One annual snapshot is enough.
  • Respect privacy: Collect demographic data anonymously and voluntarily.
  • Show action: Describe diversity or wellbeing initiatives, not just numbers.
  • Compare year-on-year: Highlight improvements to demonstrate progress.

How It Aligns with CSRD and VSME

FrameworkTopicRelevance
VSME S1–S4Workforce, equality, safety, trainingSocial indicators for SMEs
CSRD Article 19aDouble materialityWorkforce and diversity are core social topics
ESRS S1–S4Employees, workers, diversity, trainingEquivalent large-company standards
VSME B2Practices and policiesSummarise actions and commitments

These disclosures demonstrate that health and care SMEs uphold fair, inclusive, and safe working conditions in line with EU sustainability goals.


Example: Care Clinic Workforce Summary

Organisation: WellLife Community Clinic Size: 65 employees Highlights:

  • 78% female staff
  • 15% turnover (down from 20%)
  • 12 training hours per employee
  • 0 lost-time injuries
  • 95% of staff completed equality training

Narrative:

“The clinic prioritises staff wellbeing, equality, and professional growth. Enhanced training and flexible schedules reduced turnover by 25% while maintaining excellent patient care.”


Key Terms

  • CSRD: Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (EU 2022/2464)
  • VSME: Voluntary Sustainability Reporting Standard for SMEs (EFRAG, 2024)
  • S1–S4: VSME social modules covering workforce, diversity, health, and training
  • Double materiality: Considering both how sustainability affects the business and how the business affects people
  • FTE: Full-time equivalent
  • Inclusion policy: A statement committing to fair and equal treatment of all employees

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