A complete, annotated resume for a certified nursing assistant. Every section is broken down — so you can see exactly what makes a CNA resume land interviews at hospitals and skilled nursing facilities.
Scroll down to see the full resume, then read why each section works.
Certified Nursing Assistant with 2 years of experience at a 200-bed skilled nursing facility, specializing in memory care. Assigned to a 12-resident hall with zero fall incidents over 18 months. Proficient in PointClickCare and Epic for ADL charting, vital signs, and intake/output documentation. BLS-certified, trained on Hoyer and sit-to-stand lifts.
Clinical: ADLs, vital signs, fingerstick glucose monitoring, specimen collection, infection control, fall prevention, dementia care, wound care observation Equipment: Hoyer lift, sit-to-stand lift, gait belt, mechanical bed, pulse oximeter EHR: PointClickCare, Epic Certifications: CNA (Illinois), BLS/CPR (AHA)
Five things this resume does that most CNA resumes don’t.
Most CNA summaries say “compassionate nursing assistant with experience in patient care.” Maria names the facility type (200-bed SNF), the unit (memory care), and the assignment (12-resident hall). A nurse manager reading this immediately knows what workload Maria can handle and whether her experience fits their unit.
Zero fall incidents over 18 months, zero transfer-related injuries, 98% on-time charting compliance. These are the numbers that matter in CNA hiring. Facilities pay real money for liability reduction, and a candidate who can prove a clean safety record is worth more than one who describes herself as “dedicated” or “hardworking.”
Maria doesn’t just list PointClickCare under skills — she describes her charting discipline: what she documented, how fast, and her compliance rate. In a credential-gated industry where charting errors create real liability, EHR fluency is the second thing a nurse manager scans for after the CNA certification itself.
Hoyer lift, sit-to-stand lift, gait belt, glucometer. Naming equipment tells the hiring manager Maria can start on day one without additional training. Generic phrases like “assisted with patient transfers” don’t communicate the same readiness.
Training 3 newly hired CNAs shows Maria is already operating beyond her own assignment. For a nurse manager considering whether a candidate is ready for a hospital role or a charge aide position, this bullet is the one that makes the case.
The weak version describes what every CNA does. The strong version names the setting, the census, the unit type, and the acuity level — immediately telling the nurse manager what workload Maria can handle.
The weak version uses adjectives any CNA could claim. The strong version uses specifics (2 years, 200-bed SNF, memory care, zero falls, two named EHRs) that only one person can claim.
The weak version mixes personality traits with vague skills. The strong version categorizes clinical competencies, equipment, EHR systems, and certifications — making it easy for a nurse manager to verify fit.
This exact resume template helped our founder land a remote data scientist role — beating 2,000+ other applicants, with zero connections and zero referrals. Just a great resume, tailored to the job.
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