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Respiratory Rate Assessment

Classify respiratory rate against age-appropriate normal ranges and flag abnormal patterns. Free prehospital calculator for respiratory rate assessment. ARC and A...

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A child has been brought in by family concerned about fast breathing. The crew counts 38 breaths per minute. Before deciding on supplemental oxygen and transport priority, they need to know whether this rate is normal, mildly elevated or severely elevated for the child's age.

Respiratory Rate Assessment
Respiratory
Normal respiratory rate ranges:
Adult: 12–20 · Child 6–12 yrs: 18–30 · Child 1–5 yrs: 22–37 · Infant: 30–53 · Neonate: 35–60 breaths/min Bradypnoea: below range · Tachypnoea: above range Count for a full 60 seconds for accuracy. RR is one of the earliest indicators of deterioration.
💡 RR is often the most under-documented vital sign — yet it is the strongest early predictor of clinical deterioration.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Compares a measured respiratory rate against age-specific normal ranges for adults, children (6-12 years), young children (1-5 years), infants (<1 year) and neonates. Classifies the rate as bradypnoea, normal, mild tachypnoea or severe tachypnoea with recommended actions for each.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Normal respiratory rate ranges by age group: Adult (>12 yrs): 12-20 breaths/min Child 6-12 yrs: 18-30 breaths/min Child 1-5 yrs: 22-37 breaths/min Infant <1 yr: 30-53 breaths/min Neonate (0-28 days): 35-60 breaths/min Classification: Upper limit+10: Severe tachypnoea -- high-flow O2 + priority transport

Normal respiratory rate decreases with age as the larger lung volumes and more efficient gas exchange of adults reduce the need for rapid breathing. Infants rely heavily on respiratory rate (rather than tidal volume) to compensate for respiratory compromise, making tachypnoea an early and sensitive indicator of distress in the young. Bradypnoea in any age group indicates central nervous system depression, fatigue or obstruction and requires immediate assessment of ventilatory adequacy.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Child aged 4 years -- 38 breaths/min
Given: Respiratory rate: 38 breaths/min | Age group: child 1-5 years
Working: Normal range for 1-5 yrs: 22-37 breaths/min | 38 breaths/min = upper limit + 1 | Just above normal range -- mild tachypnoea
Answer: 38 breaths/min -- Mild tachypnoea for child 1-5 yrs (normal: 22-37). Assess for fever, pain, hypoxia or anxiety.
💡 Illustrative example only. Verify all clinical decisions with your agency protocol, medical director and partner clinician. Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC prehospital care standards. 38 breaths/min in a 4-year-old is just above the upper normal limit. Assess for fever (most common cause in paediatric tachypnoea), pain, hypoxia and distress. A child who is alert and well-perfused with a rate of 38 likely has a benign cause, but reassess in 5 minutes.
Standard
Adult with severe tachypnoea -- 36 breaths/min
Given: Respiratory rate: 36 breaths/min | Age group: adult
Working: Normal adult range: 12-20 breaths/min | Upper limit: 20 | Upper+10: 30 | 36 > 30 -- severe tachypnoea
Answer: 36 breaths/min -- Severe tachypnoea for adult (normal: 12-20). High-flow O2, assess for respiratory distress, consider CPAP, priority transport.
💡 Illustrative example only. Verify all clinical decisions with your agency protocol, medical director and partner clinician. Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC prehospital care standards. A respiratory rate of 36 in an adult is markedly elevated. Assess for: bronchospasm, pulmonary oedema, PE, pneumonia, diabetic ketoacidosis, severe pain, metabolic acidosis. Obtain SpO2 and calculate S/F ratio. Consider early notification to receiving hospital.
Advanced
Neonate with bradypnoea -- 28 breaths/min
Given: Respiratory rate: 28 breaths/min | Age group: neonate (0-28 days)
Working: Normal neonate range: 35-60 breaths/min | 28 < 35 -- bradypnoea
Answer: 28 breaths/min -- Bradypnoea for neonate (normal: 35-60). Assess airway, consider assisted ventilation, immediate transport.
💡 Illustrative example only. Verify all clinical decisions with your agency protocol, medical director and partner clinician. Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC prehospital care standards. Bradypnoea in a neonate is a serious finding -- normal neonatal respiratory rate is 35-60 breaths/min. A rate of 28 indicates respiratory depression. Assess airway patency and quality of respiratory effort. Prepare for assisted ventilation (bag-valve-mask) and immediate transport.

4 Sanity check

Normal respiratory rate by age group
Adult: 12-20 | Child 6-12: 18-30 | Child 1-5: 22-37 | Infant <1yr: 30-53 | Neonate: 35-60 breaths/min
Count respiratory rate for a full 60 seconds
30-second counts multiplied by 2 introduce more error than full 60-second counts | Count without alerting the patient -- awareness changes breathing pattern
Tachypnoea causes to assess
Hypoxia | Fever | Pain | Anxiety | Metabolic acidosis (DKA, sepsis) | Pulmonary oedema | Bronchospasm | Pulmonary embolism
Bradypnoea causes requiring immediate assessment
Opioid toxicity | Head injury with raised ICP | Hypothermia | Exhaustion after prolonged tachypnoea | Sedative toxicity
Bradypnoea in any age group: immediately assess ventilatory adequacy and prepare to assist.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Counting respiratory rate for 15 or 30 seconds and multiplying up Wanting a quicker measurement in a busy scene Significant counting error -- a 30-second count multiplied by 2 can be off by 4-6 breaths/min compared to a full 60-second count Count respiratory rate for a full 60 seconds. If time genuinely does not permit, use a 30-second count as an approximation and note this on the patient record. In paediatric patients especially, 60-second counts are more reliable.
Alerting the patient you are counting their breathing Telling the patient what you are measuring Patient consciously modifies their breathing rate -- recorded rate is not representative of their spontaneous respiratory pattern Count respiratory rate covertly -- tell the patient you are checking their pulse while you simultaneously count chest rise and fall. Alternatively, observe chest movement while a partner is engaging the patient in conversation.
Not reassessing respiratory rate after interventions Recording a single baseline rate without follow-up measurement Response to treatment (oxygen, bronchodilators, position change) not captured -- worsening missed Reassess respiratory rate every 5 minutes in acutely unwell patients, and immediately after any intervention that targets respiratory function (supplemental oxygen, nebulised medication, CPAP initiation).
Using adult normal ranges for paediatric patients Not selecting the correct age group for comparison A respiratory rate of 40 in an infant (normal) is misclassified as severe tachypnoea (adult normal 12-20) Always select the correct age group before interpreting respiratory rate. Paediatric normal ranges are significantly higher than adult ranges, particularly in infants and neonates.