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Certified respiratory therapist resume examples from 2026

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Updated March 26, 2025
6 min read
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How to write a certified respiratory therapist resume

Craft a resume summary statement

A resume summary is your opening statement that highlights your strongest skills and top accomplishments. It is your chance to quickly let recruiters know who you are professionally - and why they should hire you for the certified respiratory therapist role.

Step 1: Mention your current job title or the role you're pursuing.

Step 2: Include your years of experience in certified respiratory therapist-related roles. Consider adding relevant company and industry experience as relevant to the job listing.

Step 3: Highlight your greatest accomplishments. Here is your chance to make sure your biggest wins aren't buried in your resume.

Step 4: Again, keep it short. Your goal is to summarize your experience and highlight your accomplishments, not write a paragraph.

These tips will help you demonstrate why you are the perfect fit for the certified respiratory therapist position.

Please upload your resume so Zippia’s job hunt AI can draft a summary statement for you.

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List the right project manager skills

Use your Skills section to show you have the knowledge and technical ability to do the job. Here is how to make the most of your skills section and make sure you have the right keywords:

  1. You often need to include the exact keywords from the job description in your resume. Look at the job listing and consider which of the listed skills you have experience with, along with related skills.
  2. Include as many relevant hard skills and soft skills as possible from the listing.
  3. Use the most up to date and accurate terms. Don't forget to be specific.
These five steps should give you a strong elevator pitch and land you some certified respiratory therapist interviews.

Here are example skills to include in your “Area of Expertise” on a certified respiratory therapist resume:

  • Patients
  • Respiratory Care
  • BLS
  • Life Support
  • CRT
  • Ventilation
  • Advanced Life Support
  • Resuscitation
  • Acls
  • CPR
  • Oxygen Therapy
  • Mechanical Ventilation
  • Rehabilitation
  • Pulmonary Function
  • Critical Care
  • Home Health
  • Patient Education
  • EKG
  • Airway Management
  • Nebulizer
  • Physical Therapy
  • Arterial Blood Gases
  • Aerosol Therapy
  • BiPAP
  • CPAP
  • Emergency Room
  • Manage Patient Care
  • NICU
  • Ventilator Management
  • CPT

Zippia’s AI can customize your resume for you.

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How to structure your work experience

Next you should include your work experience. Structure your work experience section by listing your most recent experience first, followed by earlier roles in reverse chronological order.

Start with your job title, company name, city, and state on the left. Align dates in month and year format on the right-hand side.

Include only recent, relevant jobs. Avoid including work experience over 20 years to avoid ageism.

Beneath each job, you should have bullet points to emphasize why you're the perfect fit for the certified respiratory therapist.

How to write certified respiratory therapist experience bullet points

Remember, your resume is not a list of responsibilities or a job description. This is your chance to show why you're good at your job and what you accomplished.

Use the XYZ formula for your work experience bullet points. Here's how it works:

  • Use strong action verbs like Led, Built, or Optimized.
  • Follow up with numbers when possible to support your results. How much did performance improve? How much revenue did you drive?
  • Wrap it up by explaining the actions you took to achieve the result and how you made an impact.

This creates bullet points that read Achieved X, measured by Y, by doing Z.

Here are examples from great certified respiratory therapist resumes:

Work history example #1

Respiratory Therapist Assistant

Phoenix Children's Hospital

  • Worked as an RRT II in an intensive care mobile environment to critical patients being transferred via air or ground transport.
  • Utilized and understood diagnostic equipment for cardiopulmonary services, including EKG.
  • Performed CPAP follow-up via phone call or card download from the CPAP machine.
  • Treated patients using a variety of methods including chest physiotherapy, aerosol medication, BiPAP/CPAP and mechanical ventilation.
  • Served as primary and secondary BLS/NRP instructor for all healthcare disciplines.

Work history example #2

Certified Respiratory Therapist

Hialeah Hospital

  • Responded with proper BLS in emergency code situations with 100% revival success rate.
  • Served as primary and secondary BLS/NRP instructor for all healthcare disciplines.
  • Performed pediatric/newborn respiratory intervention, arterial line placement and general floor therapy (included bronchoscopies/ABG's).
  • Responded to all cardiopulmonary emergency requests and rendered care as per ACLS standards with strong knowledge of the process.
  • Performed basic respiratory therapy procedures, ventilator therapy, and ABG's.

Work history example #3

Certified Respiratory Therapist

Heritage Healthcare

  • Implemented and performed bronchodilator therapies and CPT and PEP therapies.
  • Worked as a new graduate in a 500 bed Level 1 Trauma Center, UNMH.
  • Initiated CPR, and other life saving measures, ACLS/BLS certified.
  • Maintained current respiratory licensing and BLS card.
  • Performed calibrations and quality assurance on PFT machine/equipment.

Work history example #4

Certified Respiratory Therapist

St. John's Riverside Hospital

  • Performed chest physiotherapy, therapy vest, intrapulmonary percussive ventilation, IPPB, mist and croup tents.
  • Assisted physicians with diagnostic and therapeutic procedures.
  • Orientated all new RCP's.
  • Responded with proper BLS in emergency code situations with 100% revival success rate.
  • Provided education/orientation of V60 BiPAP to local paramedic groups.

Zippia’s AI can customize your resume for you.

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Add an education section to your resume

The education section should display your highest degree first.

Place your education section appropriately on your resume. If you graduated over 5 years ago, this section should be at the bottom of your resume. If you just graduated and lack relevant work experience, the education section should go to the top.

If you have a bachelor's or master's degree, do not list your high school education. If your graduation year is more than 15-20 years ago, it's better not to include dates in this section.

Here are some examples of good education entries from certified respiratory therapist resumes:

Master's Degree in medical technician

Baker College, Washington, MI

2014 - 2015

Master's Degree in medical technician

University of North Texas, Denton, TX

2014 - 2015

Highlight your certified respiratory therapist certifications on your resume

If you have any additional certifications or education-like achievements, add them to the education section.

To list, use the full name of the certification and the organization that issued it, along with the date of achievement.

Here are some of the best certifications to have on certified respiratory therapist resumes:

  1. Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT)
  2. Basic Life Support for Healthcare and Public Safety (BLS)
  3. Basic Life Support (BLS)

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