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Create CVAn ATS resume for ICU nurse is screened under a high-acuity competency model. Hospital applicant tracking systems differentiate ICU candidates from general acute care nurses by parsing ventilator management, hemodynamic monitoring, vasoactive medication administration, and critical event response terminology.
ICU-specific ATS filters prioritize:
•“ICU Nurse” or “Intensive Care Unit Registered Nurse” in job titles
• Ventilator management experience
• Hemodynamic monitoring and arterial line management
• Vasoactive drip administration
• Sepsis protocol implementation
• CRRT or advanced life support exposure
• Code Blue leadership or rapid response participation
• EHR documentation systems such as Epic or Cerner
• ACLS and specialty certifications
If the resume lacks high-acuity language, it may be misclassified as general Med-Surg or Telemetry nursing.
ICU nurse screening algorithms reward density of critical care terminology. Sparse references to critical care reduce ranking precision.
High-impact ICU language includes:
•Managed 1–2 ventilated patients per shift
• Administered titratable vasoactive drips
• Monitored arterial lines and central venous pressure
• Implemented sepsis bundles
• Managed post-operative cardiac patients
Low-impact phrasing includes:
•Provided care in ICU
• Assisted with critical patients
• Helped during emergencies
The second pattern lacks technical specificity required for ICU search filters.
ICU units operate under lower patient-to-nurse ratios due to complexity. ATS systems recognize this as a classification signal.
Strong ICU resumes specify:
•1:1 or 1:2 nurse-to-patient ratios
• Bed capacity of ICU unit
• Level I or Level II trauma designation
• Frequency of high-risk interventions
Without acuity ratios, the resume may not register as critical care–intensive.
ICU nurse ATS scoring increases with device-specific and procedure-level references such as:
•Ventilator weaning protocols
• CRRT (Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy)
• ECMO exposure
• Chest tube management
• Post-cardiac surgery monitoring
• Sedation management
These signals differentiate ICU competency from general inpatient care.
Professional Experience
ICU Registered Nurse
•Managed 1–2 ventilated patients per shift in 20-bed Level I Trauma ICU
• Administered titratable vasoactive drips improving hemodynamic stability outcomes by 18%
• Monitored arterial lines and central venous pressure ensuring accurate real-time assessments
• Implemented sepsis bundle protocols reducing mortality indicators by 22%
• Led Code Blue interventions decreasing response time by 15%
Why this passes:
•ICU unit clearly defined
• Patient ratio specified
• Advanced procedures included
• Quantified patient outcomes
• Trauma designation strengthens acuity classification
Registered Nurse
•Worked in ICU
• Provided patient care
• Assisted with ventilators
• Helped during emergencies
• Completed documentation
Why this fails:
•No patient ratio
• No procedure depth
• No device specificity
• No measurable outcomes
• Language lacks critical care density
The weak version does not demonstrate measurable high-acuity competency required for ICU classification.
ICU nurse ATS ranking improves when certifications align with critical care intensity.
High-value credentials include:
•ACLS
• CCRN
• PALS (if pediatric ICU exposure)
• TNCC (if trauma ICU)
When certifications are explicitly marked as active and aligned with ICU terminology, classification confidence increases.
Professional Summary
ICU Nurse with 8+ years of critical care experience managing high-acuity patients in Level I Trauma Intensive Care Units. Licensed Registered Nurse in Illinois with advanced expertise in ventilator management, vasoactive drip administration, and hemodynamic monitoring. Proven ability to maintain 1:2 patient ratios while improving sepsis protocol compliance and reducing mortality indicators. Experienced in Epic EHR documentation, rapid response coordination, and interdisciplinary critical care collaboration.
Core Skills
Intensive Care Nursing
Ventilator Management
Hemodynamic Monitoring
Arterial Line Management
Central Line Care
Vasoactive Drip Administration
Sepsis Protocol Implementation
CRRT
Chest Tube Management
Epic EHR
Code Blue Leadership
Rapid Response Team
Sedation Management
Trauma ICU Care
ACLS
CCRN
HIPAA Compliance
Critical Patient Assessment
Professional Experience
ICU Registered Nurse
Chicago Regional Medical Center
2017–Present
•Managed 1–2 ventilated high-acuity patients per 12-hour shift in 24-bed Level I Trauma ICU
• Administered titratable vasoactive drips reducing hemodynamic instability events by 20%
• Implemented sepsis bundle compliance improving patient survival indicators by 18%
• Led rapid response and Code Blue events decreasing intervention time by 17%
• Reduced central line infection rates by 25% through strict protocol adherence
ICU Registered Nurse
Metro Health Hospital
2014–2017
•Monitored arterial lines and central venous pressure ensuring accurate hemodynamic assessments
• Managed post-operative cardiac patients improving recovery stabilization metrics
• Participated in CRRT management enhancing renal support efficiency
• Maintained 100% compliance with documentation standards in Epic
• Supported interdisciplinary care planning reducing ICU length of stay by 12%
Certifications
Registered Nurse (RN), Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation – Active License
Basic Life Support (BLS)
Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS)
Critical Care Registered Nurse (CCRN)
Education
Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), University of Illinois Chicago, 2014