Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA): Job Description, Salary, and How to Become One

Dive into the dynamic world of certified registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs) and learn about their responsibilities, salary expectations, and the steps to becoming one.

Updated   Published

Whether you're a seasoned registered nurse (RN) considering advancing your career or a student mapping out your education, we've provided everything you need to know to pursue a career as a certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA).

Read more about the job description, responsibilities, salary expectations, and steps to becoming a CRNA. 

Job Description

CRNAs are advanced practice registered nurses (ARPNs) qualified to administer anesthesia and care for patients recovering from anesthesia.

Integral to healthcare systems, CRNAs can find themselves working in various settings with their advanced knowledge and experience. Their job prospects can range from an "easy-going setting,” like a dental clinic, to a more high-stakes, less predictable one, such as in the ICU.

Overall, CRNAs must still demonstrate the ability to provide safe patient care and effective communication skills with the patients they care for and those they work directly with. 

Practice Settings

CRNAs typically work in:

  • Hospitals (e.g., surgical units, emergency departments, intensive care units, and labor and delivery rooms)
  • Outpatient care centers
  • Physician offices or other healthcare practitioners 
  • Private practices (e.g., cosmetic surgery clinics)
  • Dental offices
  • Universities and Professional Schools

Important Skills and Qualities

  • Principles of local and general anesthesia administration, monitoring, and management
  • Attentiveness to monitoring and understanding vital signs, including ECG monitoring, ventilator settings, and lab results. 
  • Arterial line placement
  • Tracheal intubation
  • Epidurals
  • ACLS
  • Strong communication and leadership skills
  • Ability to work independently and collaborative 
  • Proficiency in surgery principles, airway management, postoperative care, teaching, critical care, and patient care. 
  • Comprehensiveness in legal aspects of nurse anesthesia practice 

CRNA Responsibilities

The type of work CRNAs perform significantly differs from that of a nurse working bedside on a general medicine unit, as they're accountable for a patient's life under the influence of full anesthesia.

The CRNA must be privy to specific conditions or diagnoses that may put a patient at high risk when under (e.g., history of smoking/alcoholism, sleep apnea, hypertension, etc.). If an acute event occurs, they must be knowledgeable and vigilant and act quickly to stabilize the patient. 

More generally, CRNA responsibilities include:

  • Patient Assessment
  • Anesthesia Plan Development
  • Administering Anesthesia
  • Patient Monitoring
  • Post-Anesthesia Care
  • Patient Education
  • Emergency Management
  • Record Keeping
  • Collaboration and Leadership

CRNA Salary

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), CRNAs earn:

  • Mean Hourly Wage: $98.93
  • Mean Annual Wage: $205,770

Top-Paying States:

  • North Dakota: $246,510+
  • California: $246,510
  • Connecticut: $240,580
  • New York: $238,710
  • Illinois: $238,440

Highest-Paying Industries:

  • Outpatient Centers: $246,980
  • General Hospitals: $217,570
  • Office of Physicians: $200,280
  • Colleges and Universities: $199,460
  • Offices of Other Health Practitioners: $143,790

Ultimately, the earning potential of a CRNA will vary depending on several factors, including practice setting, location, experience, and more.

How to Become a CRNA

Becoming a CRNA is a significant commitment that requires several years of education and clinical experience. Although the pathway may vary in length and degree steps, the following five steps provide a general overview of how to become certified.

1. Earn a Bachelor's Degree in Nursing (BSN)

Earning a BSN can be achieved in several ways, including a Traditional four-year program or a bridge program for practicing nurses who earned an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN). A BSN provides the foundational knowledge and skills to practice and excel in post-graduate studies.

2. Become an RN

If a future CRNA achieves their Traditional BSN over four years of study, they must pass the National Council for Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses (NCLEX-RN) to become licensed.

3. Gain Experience

Gaining experience in a critical care setting is a typical requirement for admission into a CRNA program, with a usual minimum of one to two years. While gaining experience, RNs should aim to develop a strong understanding of disease processes and advanced skills such as hemodynamic monitoring, mechanical ventilation, and vasoactive drug administration.

4. Earn a Doctoral Degree from an Accredited Program

Accredited nurse anesthesia programs provide the specialized training and education needed to practice as a CRNA. These programs include coursework and clinical experiences.

CRNAs have historically become certified with an MSN; however, to comply with requirements from the Accreditation of Nurse Anesthesia Educational Programs (COA), doctoral education will be required for entry into nurse anesthesia practice by 2025. 

5. Become Certified

After graduating from a CRNA program, you must pass the National Certification Examination (NCE) administered by the National Board of Certification and Recertification for Nurse Anesthetists (NBCRNA).

Once certified, CRNAs must follow state licensure requirements, complete continuing education, and undergo periodic recertification.

Columnist

Kyle Oliver has 7 years experience as a BSN, RN.

4 Articles   9 Posts


CRNA2025YES

40 Posts

ICUSAVVY said:

Reading is an important skill.  Notice the words "intensive care".  Emergency Dept is excluded intentionally. Clearly, being right is important to you.  So please enjoy your being right rather than reading the standard. 

Again-Stop deflecting and stick to the FACTS.  You're an ICU RN, right?  Reading and  paying attention to detail is part of the job. 

 

"Those who have experiences in other areas may be considered provided they can demonstrate competence with managing unstable patients, invasive monitoring, ventilators, and critical care pharmacology"

 

Did you conveniently miss that part?  

CRNA2025YES

40 Posts

ICUSAVVY said:

Reading is an important skill.  Notice the words "intensive care".  Emergency Dept is excluded intentionally. Clearly, being right is important to you.  So please enjoy your being right rather than reading the standard. 

And yes-being right is VERY important to me as it should be to you.  is this how you're going to practice as a CRNA? Misleading your patients? Not being humble enough to admit a mistake? You'll do great:-) Have a blessed evening. 

 

To anyone who is interested in attending CRNA programs and have excellent LEVEL 1 ER experience and can prove  and demonstrate competence with managing unstable patients, invasive monitoring, ventilators, and critical care pharmacology in THE  LEVEL 1 ER setting, don't let folks like  "ICUSAVVY". mislead and misinform you. Having sat on a couple of admission committees for CRNA programs and  having worked closely with COA  I implore you to go after your dreams and apply! Be careful and pay very close attention to  people who   continue to be wrong LOUD and PROUD despite the evidence. Good luck you guys! You can do this!

offlabel

1,709 Posts

C'mon guys...be pro's...this is pathetic....

CRNA2025YES

40 Posts

sukh :) said:

Hi, I am an NP working in a Inova UC for past 2 years and have RN experience of 14+ years but not in ICU. I want to get in CRNA school. Could you please guide me how I can achieve my dream? 

Thank you

If you can get into any ICU(preferably) or a LEVEL 1 ER(program options are out there but they're limited ) then I would start there, 

1) Work on improving/retaking any  HARD science courses(I.e A/P, Micro) that you have taken in the past and obtained less than  As/high Bs in. Most programs have a time limit on the sciences( take them over  if those courses are expired)

2) A couple of programs may even accept your NP ICU experience(as long as you can prove you're not just writing orders but are at bedside titrating drips, managing vent settings(if your hospital allows) etc. 

3) When and if you do return to bedside(ICU or LEVE 1 ER(if that is your only option), do join a committee or two on your unit(try to hold some type of position in such committee). Precept/Charge/Teach/Become a superuser when and if able. 

4) When you do land an ICU bedside job or NOW (if possible), SHADOW  a CRNA(some programs will allow you to shadow an MD Anesthesiologist but shadowing  a CRNA I believe is always preferred.

5) REACH out to program directors  and start throwing and putting your name out there 

6) Attend  a few CRNA conferences if financially able to and throw your name out there

7) Start looking at the ESSAY requirements at he schools you're interested in and start thinking /writing a rough draft now.

😎When you land an ICU RN job or now, reach out to a few people (preferable a supervisor, MD, nursing school instructor/unit instructor etc.) who  you  can trust to comfortably write you a  GREAT letter of recommendation. Most schools prefer 3. 

9) IF the programs you are interested in  have open houses/zoom meetings, ALWAYS attend!

10) Start INTERVIEW prepping NOW! (EQ, clinical questions )

11)  START SAVING NOW! 

12) FIGURE OUT your WHY(WHY CRNA?)

The best of luck to you!

Hi, I need some advice or guidance on my situation.  I am a RN who currently works in CTSICU with 1.5 years of experience. I want to be a CRNA and have applied to 2 programs as of now. I'm currently working on my 3rd application. Just some background info. I have a science degree with a GPA of 2.74. A few years later, I obtained my BSN degree and earned a 3.38 GPA. I shadowed a CRNA twice and earned my CCRN. My question is, can I get into CRNA school with BSN GPA of 3.38 and natural since GPA of 2.37? If not, what actions do you recommend I take to make myself a better applicant?

Specializes in Adult Critical Care. Has 13 years experience.

You might be able to get into a CRNA school, but it is going to be tough.   The average applicant is closer to a 3.5 GPA.  I'd recommend continuing working where you currently are, because cardiac surgery ICU is probably the best place an applicant could come from.  The average currently graduating CRNA has ~3.5 years of previous RN experience. You'd become a better applicant simply by accumulating more experience, particularly if you can technical skills such as ultrasound (lines team) and ECMO.

If you really want to stand out I'd consider retaking core pre-requisite CRNA classes or working on an MSN.  About 20% of my class already had masters degrees.

jfratian said:

You might be able to get into a CRNA school, but it is going to be tough.   The average applicant is closer to a 3.5 GPA.  I'd recommend continuing working where you currently are, because cardiac surgery ICU is probably the best place an applicant could come from.  The average currently graduating CRNA has ~3.5 years of previous RN experience. You'd become a better applicant simply by accumulating more experience, particularly if you can technical skills such as ultrasound (lines team) and ECMO.

If you really want to stand out I'd consider retaking core pre-requisite CRNA classes or working on an MSN.  About 20% of my class already had masters degrees.

 

Ernest BSN RN said:

Hi, I need some advice or guidance on my situation.  I am a RN who currently works in CTSICU with 1.5 years of experience. I want to be a CRNA and have applied to 2 programs as of now. I'm currently working on my 3rd application. Just some background info. I have a science degree with a GPA of 2.74. A few years later, I obtained my BSN degree and earned a 3.38 GPA. I shadowed a CRNA twice and earned my CCRN. My question is, can I get into CRNA school with BSN GPA of 3.38 and natural since GPA of 2.37? If not, what actions do you recommend I take to make myself a better applicant?

I forgot to mention in my prior message that I have 2 years of ED experience where I obtained ultrasound guided IV experience. But your right, I was considering taking some classes; however, I'm debating to do grad level vs. retaking undergrad classes. 

Specializes in Adult Critical Care. Has 13 years experience.

Don't get analysis paralysis.  I think the important thing to do is do something productive, keep moving forward, and apply to schools next year if you don't get in this year.  Many CRNA programs will tell you how to improve your application if you ask them.

Edited by jfratian

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CRNA School Prep Academy

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Ernest BSN RN said:

 

I forgot to mention in my prior message that I have 2 years of ED experience where I obtained ultrasound guided IV experience. But your right, I was considering taking some classes; however, I'm debating to do grad level vs. retaking undergrad classes. 

You should check with the program(s) you're applying to regarding retaking classes or taking grad level. 

Unfortunately, a 2.37 Science GPA is pretty low, and a lot of programs have minimum GPA requirements to meet (typically 3.0 or above)... not to mention how competitive the application pool is. 

But please don't worry! It can and has been done! Talking to the program(s) you're interested in will help, and it's SUPER important that you do!

Here's why: 

Some schools won't even consider retakes! 

When calculating GPA, every program does it a little differently. Some will completely replace old grades with the new grade, some will average the two together and some as mentioned above won't even consider a retake, or will only consider a retake and replace the grade under certain circumstances. 

Please be sure to check as some would prefer you to take some grad level courses instead of retakes. 

You got this-- we are rooting for you! 

jfratian said:

Don't get analysis paralysis.  I think the important thing to do is do something productive, keep moving forward, and apply to schools next year if you don't get in this year.  Many CRNA programs will tell you how to improve your application if you ask them.

Love this- excellent. Thank you for sharing!