Yes, absolutely.
It took me three months (after switching to Dvorak) to reach ~150WPM. I've touch-typed Qwerty before, and even after almost a decade, I only achieved ~100WPM. I did not change any other habits when I moved to Dvorak; I use the same fingers for the same keys, etc. I hadn't tried to specifically improve my typing speed other than by using it daily and doing the same things I did earlier.
For me, though, the typing speed isn't the main benefit (I'm also a programmer); the main benefit is that it's much more comfortable to type. I can still touch-type at ~80% my old speed in Qwerty (it'd be 100% if I still used Qwerty regularly, as I did in the first few years), but it feels very awkward and uncomfortable in comparison. It's not that I type differently now, it's just that I know how much nicer it feels in Dvorak :-)
(I've heard the same thing even from people who tried Dvorak but gave up after a few hours/days.)
Other people I know have generally reported anything from minor to major gains in typing speed, but the initial learning period involves typing painfully slowly for several days.
YMMV: Most people I've spoken to were comfortable in touch-typing Dvorak after 2-10 days with a few hours a day of typing. Using something like www.dvorak.nl for the first few days certainly is more efficient than just switching and trying to learn it the hard way. I did the latter, and it took me ~2 weeks until I felt comfortable, and a few more to reach my former typing speed.
I've never looked back after changing, and I wholeheartedly recommend giving it a try if you have a period where you can afford typing really slowly. If you don't have time to learn it without much external pressure, I'd only recommend trying this if you're really suffering from RSI and already fixed obvious problems (keyboard height/alignment, etc.).