Mental Health Professional resume examples for 2025

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Updated March 26, 2025
6 min read
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Mental Health Professional Resume

 
Eugene Marshall
Mental Health Professional
3887 E. Oak Ln., New York, NY | (350) 555-1495 | emarshall@example.com
Work Experience
Mental Health Professional, INSTITUTE OF COMMUNITY SERVICES - New York, NY
2013

Qualified Mental Health Professional Provide overall service coordination, referral, linkage and advocacy to consumers with varying needs.

Worked with people who have developmental challenges to attain improved mental health by developing rehabilitative person centered goals

Developed and implemented treatment plans using evidenced based Teaching Family Model to effect positive change Served as interim Independent Living supervisor.

Conduct weekly Module Program to assisit in educating clients in regards to different aspects of thier mental health.

Substance Abuse Counselor, Palladia - New York, NY
2003 - 2013

Complete and send a substance abuse report to the substance abuse director every month.

Provide crisis interventions and generate referrals to interdepartmental or external mental health or medical providers as needed.

Orchestrated Comprehensive Biopsychosocial Assessments to develop and supervise the implementation of treatment plan goals.

Devised treatment plans tailored to meet client needs.

Drug Abuse Counselor, Gateway Foundation - Carbondale, IL
2001 - 2002

Developed case files and treatment plans.

Developed and implemented treatment plans and modified as needed.

Offered substance abuse prevention counseling to methadone patients.

Skills
Substance Abuse, Safety Checks, PSR, RN, Anger Management, Staff Members, Court Program, Crisis Intervention, MHP, Direct Clinical Services
Education
Master's Degree Psychology
2002 - 2003
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - Chapel Hill, NC
Bachelor's Degree Psychology
1998 - 2001
Ohio State University - Columbus, OH
 

How to write a mental health professional resume

Craft a resume summary statement

Put a resume summary on the top of your resume to highlight your accomplishments. A resume summary sums up your experience and skills, making it easy for hiring managers to understand your qualifications at a glance. Here are some tips to write a strong, impressive resume summary:

Step 1: Start with your professional title, or the one you aspire to.

Step 2: Detail your years of experience in mental health professional-related roles and your industry experience.

Step 3: What are your biggest professional wins? Here is your opportunity to highlight your strongest accomplishments by placing them at the start of your resume.

Step 4: Don't forget, your goal is to summarize your experience. Keep it short and sweet, so it's easy for recruiters to quickly understand why you're a great hire.

Hiring managers spend under a minute reviewing resumes on average. This means your summary needs to demonstrate your value quickly and show why you are the perfect fit for the mental health professional position.

Hi, I'm Zippi, your job search robot. Let me write a first draft of your summary statement.

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List the right project manager skills

Your Skills section is a place to list all relevant skills and abilities. Here is how to make the most of your skills section and make sure you have the right keywords:

  1. Start with the job listing. Frequently, the keywords looked for by recruiters will be listed. Be careful to include all skills in the job listing you have experience with.
  2. Consider all the software and tools you use on a daily basis. When in doubt, list them!
  3. Make sure you use accurate and up to date terms for all the skills listed.
These five steps should give you a strong elevator pitch and land you some mental health professional interviews.

Here are example skills to include in your “Area of Expertise” on a mental health professional resume:

  • Social Work
  • Patients
  • CPR
  • Excellent Interpersonal
  • Clinical Supervision
  • Clinical Documentation
  • Mental Health
  • Mental Health Issues
  • Crisis Intervention
  • Mental Health Treatment
  • Direct Care
  • Discharge Planning
  • Individual Therapy
  • Substance Abuse
  • Rehabilitation
  • Correctional Health
  • Therapeutic Services
  • Community Resources
  • Family Therapy
  • Social Services
  • Therapeutic Interventions
  • Therapy Counseling
  • Booking
  • Diagnostic Assessments
  • MHP
  • Community Agencies
  • DBT
  • Autism
  • Psychosocial Assessments
  • Foster Care

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How to structure your work experience

Your work experience should be structured:

  1. With your most recent roles first, followed by earlier roles in reverse chronological order.
  2. Job title, along with company name and location on the left.
  3. Put the corresponding dates of employment on the left side.
  4. Keep only relevant jobs on your work experience.

How to write mental health professional experience bullet points

Your resume is your chance to show your biggest accomplishments. Don't just list your job responsibilities, instead take the opportunity to show why you're really good at what you do. Here is how you do that:

  • Start with strong action verbs like managed, spearheaded, created, etc. Your goal is to show what you did and verbs will help demonstrate your contributions.
  • Use numbers to quantify your achievements. Did you save time with a new report? Increase revenue? How large was the team you managed?
  • Keep it concise. You're highlighting your achievements. Consider if all details you are sharing are relevant, or can be written more efficiently.

Here are effective examples from mental health professional resumes:

Work History Example #1

Social Worker

Catholic Charities

  • Worked full-time doing prevention work for families with open CPS cases.
  • Initiated intensive case management to facilitate permanency for children serviced.
  • Provided intensive, in-home counseling to families that had one or more children at the risk of out-of-home placement.
  • Linked clients with resources and appropriate services, monitored progress, and maintained confidential records according to DCFS standards.
  • Interviewed and counseled established and prospective adoptive parents.

Work History Example #2

Family Support Specialist

HACA

  • Created education manuals for management using Microsoft PowerPoint.
  • Maintained a caseload of more than 60 families in public schools.
  • Provided comprehensive support to children and their families through in-home/community based interventions and education to address the child's therapeutic goals.
  • Designed and implemented innovative agency programming, systems and written procedures to ensure efficient service delivery.
  • Installed, operated, troubleshooting, maintained and managed telecommunications equipment and/or services.

Work History Example #3

Co-Facilitator

The Walt Disney Company

  • Encouraged open counselor teacher-to-parent communication.
  • Conducted functional assessments, crisis plans, family histories, wraparound plans and transition plans for each team.
  • Organized and facilitated Academic Excellence Workshop for other students in Calculus and Physics courses.
  • Co-facilitated Court ordered offenders groups and managed intake/assessment process for treatment.
  • Facilitated recovery based groups as well as co-facilitated weekly Family Forum sessions in Adolescent unit for adolescents and their families.

Work History Example #4

Mental Health Professional

Easterseals

  • Marketed and began own caseload through communication with outside resources.
  • Facilitated organization's first-aid and cpr course offerings through direct customer contact and marketing efforts.
  • Qualified Mental Health Professional A/CProvides direct support, coaching, advice and education services to individual clients on a weekly basis.
  • Trained in Suicide Prevention, CPR, and First Aid.
  • Assisted patients with ADL's and laundry.

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Add an education section to your resume

Here is the best way to format your education section:

  • Display your highest degree first.
  • If you graduated over 5 years ago, put this section at the bottom of your resume. If you lack relevant work experience, the education section should go to the top.
  • If you have a bachelor's or master's degree, do not list your high school education.
  • If your graduation year is more than 15-20 years ago, it's better not to include dates in this section.

Here are some examples of good education entries from mental health professional resumes:

Master's Degree In Psychology

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC

2002 - 2003

Highlight your mental health professional certifications on your resume

If you have any additional certifications, add them to the certification section.

Start simple. Include the full name of the certification. It's also good to mention the organization that issued the certification. Next, specify when you obtained the certification.

If you have any of these certifications, be sure to include them on your mental health professional resume:

  1. Certified Professional Counselor
  2. Mental Health
  3. National Certified Counselor (NCC)
  4. Certification in Forensic Social Work (CFSW)
  5. Certified Rehabilitation Counselor (CRC)

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