In this issue Shi and colleagues report on a large three-year, prospective observational study of patients treated for schizophrenia. Although the study, funded by Eli Lilly and Company (for which I am a consultant and speaker), was not designed to identify why clinicians choose depot antipsychotics, it is the most comprehensive one to characterize the patients receiving these medications. The authors report that patients treated with a first-generation depot medication were more likely than those receiving oral medications to be younger, male, African American, less educated, and more clinically and socially dysfunctional. Over the one-year follow-up period adherence improved while these patients received depot medications.