I am a Registered Respiratory Therapist, 25 years now.
Worked 18 years on nights and now on days.
This is a hard physical job. Much harder then nursing.
On many a night shift we would be short staffed, hell most nights. You might have the ER, be in charge and also be in NICU. You never stop.
Yes we suction and do treatments but THAT is a very small part of our jobs.
This is a Respiratory display that I made last year for Respiratory Week.
I work NICU, PICU, CICU, ECMO and transports. I have taught. And still teach residents and Resp. students.
Worked with adults and pretty much everything but PFTs.
Also I am at the top pay wise in my field. Don't have a problem telling you what I make. $30.00 an hour. And it took a long time to get to this.
This field can be very rewarding and also very difficult.
Pros:
1. Excitement.
2. Saving lives when your the only one who knows what to do in a code or in many other critical situations.
3. Having some people respect you and value your input even if they have MD behind there names.

4. Seeing the patient you took care of and worked so hard with walk out of the hospital.

5. Working as a team with wonderful, caring nurses.
Cons:
1. Pay. I am at the end. So unless there is a cost of living raise in my hospital this is it. Yet my health insurance and cost of living has increased dramatically in the last few years.
2. Respect. There is a saying "Respiratory is the hospital's *****". (female dog)
3. I am a patient advocate yet have to fight all the time for better care from Dr's. who won't listen to me because of there ego's. I'm here for the patient dammit not your ego! ALL of us have to go through this(well those of us that care).
4. Working with nurses, Dr's., other Resp. Therapists that don't care and are just button pushers and knob turners. Very hard and sad.

5. Long hours, short breaks, heavy workloads, no lunch. This is NOT a desk job or for the weak. It is hard physical labor. You are on your feet all the time.
Why do I stay?
Because I LOVE WHAT I DO.

I love the excitement of a difficult transport.
I love intubating a patient that no one else could.
I love saving that child that came into ER with an asthma attack and the resident freaks out but I am cool and calm.
I love seeing years later that near drowning child that I took care of on ECMO. And the parents walk up to me with this beautiful young adult and ask if I remember them. And thank me for helping save there child because one night they watched me and the surgeons working so hard for this beautiful child that's in front of me alive.

I love telling new students that we need them and to please consider working in NICU/PICU.
Did I answer some of your questions?