After having schizophrenia, only about 30% of patients can recover to the level of completing complex learning and work tasks, i.e., only about 30% of patients can be socially competitive after treatment. Of the remaining 70% or so, 50% can return to a level where they can perform simple learning and work tasks, and the other 50% cannot return to a level where they can perform simple learning and work tasks, including even simple self-care. Therefore, parents always hope to have the best medication that can fully restore the patient’s ability to learn and work. Any antipsychotic drug has the potential to cure schizophrenia; there is no need for families to hear about a drug that is very effective and worry that the drug they are using is not the “best” drug and have to change to the “best” drug. Doctors generally use the principle of individualized treatment, according to the characteristics of the patient’s symptoms and drug characteristics to choose the right drug for the patient. There is no best drug in the world, only the best doctor. Side effects are inevitable during treatment, but they can be tolerated gradually as time goes by; there is no need for families to refuse to treat their children because of side effects, so that they miss the best time for treatment. Because the side effects of drugs can be gradually tolerated and disappear, but once the best treatment time is missed, it is irrecoverable. In addition, family members may take into account the side effects and not give the child a full course of treatment, making the condition intractable and chronic. But what makes doctors helpless is that 80% of parents delay 80% of their children in the process of obsessing about the side effects of drugs. This is an important reason for the poor prognosis of 80% of children.