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ChartRT Career & Professional Practice

Respiratory Therapist Work Settings Compared

Where the credential can take a career — the major RT work settings compared by patient population, the day-to-day work, and the specialty credential that helps in each.

Written by Apex Respiratory Editorial Team

Educational use only. This material supports respiratory therapy education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional protocols, or physician orders. Always follow facility policies and current provider orders, and verify calculations independently before clinical use.

RT Work Settings

Comparison of respiratory therapist work settings by patient population, typical work, and helpful credential
SettingPatient PopulationTypical WorkHelpful Credential
Acute care (floors, ED)Mixed inpatients and emergenciesOxygen, aerosols, assessment, airway, codesCRT or RRT
Critical care (adult ICU)Critically ill adultsMechanical ventilation, ABGs, weaning, ECMORRT, ACCS
Neonatal/pediatric (NICU/PICU)Newborns and childrenNeonatal ventilation, resuscitation, transportRRT, NPS
Sleep medicine (sleep lab)Sleep-disordered breathingPolysomnography, CPAP/BiPAP titrationRRT, SDS
Pulmonary function (PFT lab)Outpatients and pre-opSpirometry, lung volumes, DLCOCPFT, RPFT
Home care / DMEHome oxygen, ventilation, CPAPEquipment setup, education, follow-upCRT or RRT
TransportCritically ill patients in transitGround and air critical-care transportRRT (plus specialty)
Education / leadershipStudents and departmentsTeaching, management, quality improvementRRT plus a bachelor's or master's

How to Use This Chart

This chart maps the most common RT work settings to the patient populations they serve, the work done day to day, and the credential most associated with that role. The CRT and RRT are awarded by the NBRC; specialty credentials (ACCS, NPS, SDS, CPFT, RPFT) are additional exams that signal focused expertise. No credential is formally required to work in any specific setting — employers set their own requirements — but the entries below reflect common expectations in the field.

  • Portability. The CRT/RRT credential is recognized across all settings; specialty credentials and graduate education unlock higher-acuity and non-bedside roles.
  • Higher-acuity settings. ICU, NICU, and transport roles generally expect the RRT and often a matching specialty credential such as ACCS or NPS.
  • Non-bedside paths. Education, management, and industry roles typically add a bachelor's or master's degree to the credential rather than a specialty exam.

Related Resources

Sources

  1. Kacmarek RM, Stoller JK, Heuer AJ. Egan's Fundamentals of Respiratory Care. 12th ed. Elsevier; 2021. The respiratory care profession.
  2. Barnes TA, Gale DD, Kacmarek RM, Kageler WV. Competencies needed by graduate respiratory therapists in 2015 and beyond. Respir Care. 2010;55(5):601-616.