Creating a standout medical CV

A curriculum vitae (CV) is used by professionals in the fields of academia, medicine, teaching and research as an overview of accomplishments that are relevant to each realm. Accordingly, it should be updated frequently to reflect the development of your career.

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It’s not the same as a résumé

It’s not the same as a résumé

There are notable differences between a CV and a résumé, including:

Information to include

Information to include

A good CV emphasizes the points considered most important in your discipline and conforms to standard conventions within that discipline. You can learn these conventions by finding recent examples of CVs from people in your field.

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For a job candidate directly out of residency, choosing the accomplishments to include depends on the requirements of the jobs you are interested in and your individual strengths. Emphasize the most important items by placing them earlier in the document, after your education.

A physician or medical CV should include the following items:

A CV is not the place to discuss anticipated compensation, reasons for leaving previous positions, personal health problems or disabilities, examination scores or medical license and DEA numbers. You should also omit references to your race, religion, age, birthplace, citizenship or marital status.

Tips for descriptions

Tips for descriptions

Two common strategies you can use while writing a CV are gapping and parallelism.

Gapping is the use of incomplete sentences to present your information concisely. For example, you might write: “Composition Instructor (2016–2020). Planned course activities. Graded all assignments.” By using incomplete sentences, you cut out unnecessary words but convey the responsibilities of the position.

Parallelism means keeping the structure of your phrases consistent throughout a document. For example, if you use verb phrases in one portion of your CV to describe duties, use them throughout. Verb phrases are a strong way to describe responsibilities. Use the present tense for roles you currently hold and past tense for former roles.

An example of parallelism could be:

You should use both gapping and parallelism.

Table of Contents

  1. It’s not the same as a résumé
  2. Information to include
  3. Tips for descriptions