The employment history section is an important part of your medical resume. For early career doctors, it demonstrates progression, credibility, and relevance. Selection panels expect you to have met the standard requirements of your role. What distinguishes strong applications is evidence of impact, initiative, leadership, or progression beyond baseline expectations.
Your goal is not to show that you did the job, but to show how you stood out while doing it.
A strong employment section should:
Be clear, chronological, and easy to scan (list roles in reverse-chronological order)
Use consistent formatting
Prioritise relevance to the role you are applying for
Emphasise responsibility, trust, and progression
Highlight differentiators, not routine duties
What to include for each role
At minimum:
Role title
Employer and hospital or health service
Dates of employment
Rotations or streams (if relevant)
Ensure rotations and dates are correct and that role titles are accurate.
Adding achievement statements
Achievement statements are usually included as dot-points under each role and are used to differentiate your experience from others who performed a similar role.
They will usually;
Reflect contribution beyond expected PGY level
Demonstrate progression, trust, or leadership
Be selective and concise, usually 2 to 4 dot points
Avoid describing tasks that every doctor in that role performs
If a hospital or training program requires that you use a specific resume template, you may not be able to add dot-points under your roles to show achievements. In template-only resumes, differentiation often occurs elsewhere in the application.
What counts as a differentiator?
Differentiating achievements often involve;
Acting above nominal level, for example acting registrar or senior responsibilities
Leadership roles, including rostering, coordination, or supervision
Teaching or mentoring with formal responsibility
Quality improvement, audit, or guideline development
Selection for competitive rotations, terms, or streams
Recognition, such as appointment to committees or trust‑based roles
If a panel can assume you did it as part of your job, it is usually not a differentiator.
Examples of typical employment section wording (with differentiator‑focused achievement statements)
Resident Medical Officer (PGY2)
Monash Health, Clayton VIC
January 2025 – January 2026
Rotations: General Medicine, Orthopaedics, Emergency Medicine, Rehabilitation
Selected as team representative for junior medical workforce forum, contributing to after‑hours handover improvements
Delivered intern bedside teaching sessions during General Medicine rotation following positive consultant feedback
Undertook limited acting senior responsibilities during peak periods, coordinating ward jobs and escalation
Senior Resident Medical Officer (PGY3)
Austin Health, Heidelberg VIC
January 2024 – January 2025
Rotations: Cardiology, General Surgery, Intensive Care, Night Medical Officer
Provided regular clinical support and informal supervision to interns, including first‑line after‑hours advice
Appointed as Night Medical Officer for a tertiary site, reflecting trust in acute assessment and decision‑making
Contributed to departmental teaching sessions for junior doctors and medical students
Unaccredited Registrar – General Medicine (PGY4)
Northern Health, Epping VIC
February 2025 – February 2026
Led daily ward rounds and coordinated multidisciplinary care for complex medical patients
Acted as escalation point for resident staff and contributed to supervision and support of junior doctors
Developed and completed a department‑endorsed audit project aligned with physician training standards
Invited to participate in after‑hours registrar roster covering admissions and referrals
Unaccredited Registrar – Anaesthetics
Western Health, Footscray VIC
January 2026 – Current
Progressed to increased procedural independence appropriate to level, including airway management under supervision
Participated in departmental quality activities, including audit and morbidity and mortality meetings
Supported junior trainees and theatre staff during after‑hours and on‑call shifts
Demonstrated commitment to specialty pathway through sustained unaccredited appointment
Common inclusions that weaken resumes
Avoid generic dot points such as:
“Completed ward rounds and discharge summaries”
“Managed patients under supervision”
“Worked well in a multidisciplinary team”
These describe baseline expectations, not achievements.
Final checks before submission
Before submitting, confirm that:
Achievement statements clearly exceed baseline scope
Each dot point adds new information
Language is specific, factual, and professional
The employment section achievement statements align with the target role
A focused employment section that highlights meaningful differentiation signals readiness for progression and specialty training.