Schizophrenia is a truly horrible disease. It's tragic to see once promising young people reduced to unstable, unproductive lives haunted by the madness of schizophrenia. Schizophrenia always starts before age 30 but continues for the rest of a person's life. There is no cure for schizophrenia. The treatments available generally make long term institutionalization unnecessary and can prevent frequent hospitalization but do little to restore normal functioning. In particular, the treatments available don't touch the negative symptoms of schizophrenia -- lethargy and inability to have appropriate emotional and social responses. The negative symptoms may not sound that bad but they are actually devastating. Everyone familiar with the disease prays for some treatment that would improve the lives of schizophrenics.
Some results from a RAISE study are available and they're not encouraging, at least insofar as Social Security might be concerned. Here's an excerpt from the abstract of a RAISE study:
Method: The Recovery After an Initial Schizophrenia Episode–Early Treatment
Program (RAISE-ETP) study, a 34-site cluster-randomized trial, compared
NAVIGATE, a coordinated specialty care program, to usual community care
over 2 years. Receipt of SSA benefits and clinical outcomes were
assessed at program entry and every 6 months for 2 years....
Results: Among
399 RAISE-ETP participants, 36 (9%) were receiving SSA disability
benefits at baseline; of the remainder, 124 (34.1%) obtained benefits
during the 2-year study period. The NAVIGATE intervention improved
quality of life, symptoms, and employment but did not significantly
reduce the likelihood of receiving SSA disability benefits. Obtaining
benefits was predicted by more severe psychotic symptoms and greater
dysfunction and was followed by increased total income but fewer days of
employment, reduced motivation (e.g., sense of purpose, greater
anhedonia), and fewer days of intoxication. [I'm not sure what sort of intoxication they're talking about. Substance abuse isn't a part of schizophrenia. Some schizophrenics have substance abuse problems like some schizophrenics have high blood pressure but as far as I know there's no connection.]
Conclusions: A
2-year coordinated specialty care intervention did not reduce receipt
of SSA disability benefits. There were some advantages for those who
obtained SSA disability benefits over the 2-year treatment period, but
there were also some unintended adverse consequences. Providing income
supports without impeding recovery remains an important policy
challenge.