TL;DR
Must-have: NCE certification (NBCRNA), state APRN license, DEA registration, BLS/ACLS, case volume with procedure breakdown, AIMS proficiency (Epic Anesthesia or equivalent).
High-value: PALS, regional/block techniques (ultrasound-guided), arterial/central line placement, cardiac anesthesia experience, OB anesthesia, fiber-optic intubation.
Differentiators: Independent practice experience, trauma call coverage, pediatric anesthesia, pain management procedures, TEE competency, teaching/precepting experience.
Certifications & licenses
The National Certification Examination is the credential that gates CRNA hiring. Administered by the National Board of Certification and Recertification for Nurse Anesthetists (NBCRNA). Required to practice as a CRNA in all 50 states. Recertification is transitioning to the Continued Professional Certification (CPC) program, being replaced by the MAC (Maintenance of Anesthesia Certification) program by 2026.
List as “CRNA (NBCRNA, NCE, exp. 2027)” with the expiration date. Do not just write “Certified Nurse Anesthetist.”
Every state requires a separate APRN license for CRNAs. Practice authority varies: some states grant full practice authority (independent anesthesia without physician supervision), others require physician supervision or collaboration with an anesthesiologist. Name your state, authority level, and whether you can practice independently.
Write “Full Practice Authority (Illinois) — Independent Anesthesia” or “Medical Direction Model (New York) — 1:4 with anesthesiologist.”
Required for administering controlled substances, which CRNAs do in every case. List as “DEA Registration (Active)” in your certifications section.
BLS and ACLS are universally required for CRNAs. PALS (Pediatric Advanced Life Support) is required if you provide pediatric anesthesia and strongly recommended even for adult-only roles. Having all three signals full case-type readiness.
Anesthesia techniques
The core CRNA competency. Includes induction, maintenance, and emergence for the full range of surgical procedures. On your resume, list the types of cases you manage (general surgery, orthopedics, ENT, urology, gynecology) and your annual case volume.
Write “Administer general anesthesia for 750+ cases per year across general surgery, orthopedics, neurosurgery, and ENT” not “Provide anesthesia services.”
Ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve blocks are now standard of care. Name the specific blocks you perform: interscalene, supraclavicular, infraclavicular, axillary, femoral, adductor canal, popliteal sciatic, TAP. Include neuraxial techniques: spinal, epidural, combined spinal-epidural (CSE).
List specific block types with volume: “800+ regional blocks including interscalene, femoral, sciatic, and TAP under ultrasound guidance.”
CABG, valve replacements, thoracic procedures. Requires TEE monitoring, PA catheter management, one-lung ventilation (DLT placement), and hemodynamic management with vasopressors and inotropes. Cardiac experience significantly broadens your employability.
Labor epidurals, spinal anesthetics for C-sections (scheduled and emergency), and management of high-risk OB patients. Name your monthly OB case volume. Hospitals with L&D units specifically look for CRNAs with OB experience.
Anesthesia for patients under 18, with particular value for neonatal and infant cases. Requires different pharmacology, airway management (smaller ETT sizes, LMAs), and monitoring. List your pediatric case count and age range.
Procedural skills
Arterial lines (radial, femoral), central venous catheters (IJ, subclavian, femoral), and PA catheters. These are hands-on skills every CRNA needs. List the specific sites and your comfort level with ultrasound guidance.
Standard intubation, video laryngoscopy, fiber-optic intubation (awake and asleep), LMA placement, double-lumen tube placement, and emergency airway management (surgical airway). Name the specific techniques you are proficient in.
AIMS & EHR systems
The dominant anesthesia information management system in hospitals. Used for intraoperative charting, medication documentation, and vital signs recording. Epic Anesthesia experience signals day-one productivity in the OR.
Alternative AIMS used by some hospital systems and ambulatory surgery centers. If you have experience with multiple AIMS, list all of them to show adaptability.