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Respiratory Therapist Resume

Respiratory therapist resumes should include your CRT or RRT credential, state license, and key competencies like mechanical ventilation and arterial blood gas analysis. Critical care and neonatal experience are particularly valued given the acuity demands of those settings.

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Key Skills

Skills for a Respiratory Therapist resume

Include these skills on your Respiratory Therapist resume:

  • Mechanical Ventilation
  • Arterial Blood Gas Analysis
  • Bronchoscopy Assistance
  • Pulmonary Function Testing
  • Neonatal/Pediatric RT
  • ACLS
  • Airway Management
  • RRT Credential

ATS Best Practices

ATS tips for Respiratory Therapist resumes

  1. 1.List credential: 'Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT)' or 'Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT)'.
  2. 2.Include advanced credentials: 'RRT-ACCS' (adult critical care), 'RRT-NPS' (neonatal/pediatric).
  3. 3.Use 'mechanical ventilation', 'vent management', and 'ABG' as keywords.
  4. 4.Mention specialty equipment: 'oscillator', 'HFOV', 'ECMO support' if applicable.

Example

Respiratory Therapist resume example

Here is what a professional respiratory therapist resume could look like using our ATS-optimized Classic template. Your finished resume may vary based on your experience and the sections you choose to include.

David Morales

david.morales@example.com | (555) 617-4832 | Cleveland, OH | linkedin.com/in/davidmorales

Summary

Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT) with 6+ years of experience in critical care and neonatal/pediatric respiratory therapy. Expert in mechanical ventilation management, arterial blood gas analysis, and airway management. ACLS certified with strong skills in pulmonary function testing and bronchoscopy assistance.

Experience

Senior Respiratory Therapist, ICU at Cleveland Clinic2020 – Present
  • Manage mechanical ventilation for 8-12 critically ill patients per shift, optimizing ventilator settings to improve oxygenation
  • Perform arterial blood gas analysis and interpret results for ventilator weaning protocols
  • Assist with bronchoscopy procedures in ICU and operating room settings
  • Conduct pulmonary function testing for 15+ outpatients weekly, generating reports for pulmonologist review
Respiratory Therapist, NICU at University Hospitals2018 – 2020
  • Provided neonatal/pediatric RT care including CPAP, high-flow nasal cannula, and surfactant administration
  • Managed airway management including intubation assistance and emergency airway interventions
  • Maintained ACLS and NRP certifications with active participation in code blue response team

Education

A.S. in Respiratory TherapyCuyahoga Community College

2015 – 2017 | GPA: 3.5

Skills

Mechanical Ventilation, Arterial Blood Gas Analysis, Bronchoscopy Assistance, Pulmonary Function Testing, Neonatal/Pediatric RT, ACLS, Airway Management, RRT Credential, Ventilator Weaning, Critical Care

Certifications

Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT)National Board for Respiratory Care (NBRC), 2017
Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS)American Heart Association, 2024

Classic template — ATS-optimized, single-column layout

Common Questions

Frequently asked questions

How do RRT and CRT affect job opportunities?

RRT (Registered Respiratory Therapist) is the advanced credential and is required for many acute care and critical care positions. CRT (Certified Respiratory Therapist) is the entry-level credential. Most employers and state licensing boards prefer or require RRT for ICU and NICU positions. Pursuing RRT credential may expand your eligible positions significantly.

How do I show critical care RT experience?

Describe the ICU environment: patient-to-therapist ratio, vent patient percentage, and specific protocols you managed. 'Managed ventilator care for 6-8 MICU patients per shift, including weaning protocols and VAP prevention bundles' conveys both caseload and clinical sophistication.

Is neonatal RT experience worth highlighting separately?

Yes — NICU respiratory care is a distinct specialty with different equipment, protocols, and patient physiology. If you have NICU experience, list it explicitly and include relevant equipment (oscillators, iNO therapy) and credentials (RRT-NPS). NICU-qualified RTs are in strong demand at children's hospitals and level III/IV NICUs.

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