Not all.
Baptists do not at all use it, because the "Apostles'" Creed (which it is not) has the word:
-- "Catholic" (for Romanists)(proper adjective describing the proper noun Church),
or :
--"catholic" (for Roman-derived Protestant Reformers)(describing the common noun "church")
which its original parent, the Roman Creed, did not.
Because Baptists believe in the autonomy of the local church, they implicitly and explicitly reject the word "catholic" in any statement of the Biblical pattern for a New Testament church. So do many other local non-Catholic, non-Protestant, non-denominational churches, for the same reason. However, most of them would probably accept the old Roman Creed as an acceptable statement of The Faith.
But yes, I accept that the older form of the so-called apostles creed is probably a clearer example of my definition.