Healthcare ATS systems are strict about credential formatting. A license listed as "Registered Nurse" may score zero on a posting that says "RN required." Your qualifications are real. Here is how to make the algorithm recognize them.
Pass ATS as a healthcare professional by writing every credential in both full form and acronym ("Registered Nurse (RN)"), including the issuing body and expiration date for certifications, and matching the specific clinical terminology from each job description rather than using generic equivalents.
These credential abbreviations, clinical terms, and unit specializations appear most often in nursing and healthcare job descriptions. Missing the ones that apply to you lowers your keyword score.
Specific formatting and content issues that cause resumes in this category to fail ATS screening
ATS systems in healthcare are strict about credential formatting. "RN" and "Registered Nurse" are different strings in most ATS keyword matchers. A job posting that lists "RN required" may not match your resume if it only says "Registered Nurse." Write both forms every time: "Registered Nurse (RN)" in your credentials section and include the acronym again in your summary. Do the same for BSN, APRN, LPN, NP, PA, and every other credential you hold.
A job description may say "critical care" while your resume says "intensive care unit." Another may say "perioperative" while yours says "OR." Medical terminology has many accepted variations, but the ATS only matches exact strings. Use the terminology from the specific job description you are applying to. If a hospital system uses "patient-centered care" in their postings, that phrase should appear on your resume, not just "quality care."
Specific unit names, shift types, and care settings are high-value keywords in healthcare ATS systems. "ICU," "NICU," "PACU," "ED," "step-down unit," "float pool," and "telemetry" all appear as required qualifications in nursing job postings. If you have experience in these settings, they should appear in your resume not just as experience labels but as explicit keywords in your summary and skills section.
Nursing licenses are state-specific. If you hold a license in Texas and are applying in California, your Texas RN license number is irrelevant to a California ATS unless you indicate compact license eligibility or pending California licensure. Always specify your license state: "RN, Texas Board of Nursing (License #XXXXXXX)" and note any multi-state or compact license status. Also list your Nurse Compact License states if applicable.
Yes, include your license number in your credentials section. Some healthcare ATS systems verify license numbers against state nursing board databases as part of the screening process. Format it clearly: "RN License #12345678, State of Texas, Expires 12/2026." This gives the ATS the structured data it needs to verify and match your credentials.
Create a dedicated Certifications section listing each certification on its own line with the full name, acronym, issuing body, and expiration date: "Basic Life Support (BLS), American Heart Association, Expires 06/2026." Never collapse certifications into a single line or abbreviation-only list. ATS systems parse certifications as individual records and abbreviation-only entries often score zero.
Yes, significantly. Epic, Cerner, Meditech, and Allscripts are common ATS keywords in healthcare job postings. If the posting names a specific EMR and your resume does not mention it, you lose that keyword score. If you have experience with Epic at any level, write "Epic EMR" explicitly rather than just "electronic medical records." The specific product name is the keyword, not the category.