After a patient is admitted to a psychiatric hospital, first the doctor has to have a detailed medical history meeting with the patient’s family, then the doctor has to deal directly with the patient, perform a comprehensive physical and neurological examination, apply for laboratory tests in physical and biochemical aspects, and carry out a psychiatric examination of the patient in a conversational manner, then make a preliminary diagnosis and give a preliminary treatment plan. In the initial days of hospitalization, the superior physician will also carefully check the room to confirm the diagnosis and develop a treatment plan. Later, the treatment plan will be adjusted through the medical staff’s observation, assessment of efficacy, and drug side effects. If during the treatment period, the treatment team still has different treatment opinions, a case discussion or even a hospital-wide case discussion will be held to further clarify the diagnosis and provide an optimal treatment plan. The important means of inpatient treatment is still mainly medication, and adjuncts can be psychotherapy, behavioral therapy, and electro-sleep therapy. The purpose of all adjunctive treatments is to facilitate the rehabilitation of the patient’s social function during hospitalization, to improve his or her level of social functioning and to increase compliance with treatment. The physician’s visit includes doing psychiatric examination, psychotherapy, observing drug side effects, drug efficacy in order to adjust the treatment plan when appropriate, including drug dosage, dealing with drug side effects and treatment of comorbidities, evaluating the efficacy and deciding when to discharge. In fact, in addition to physician visits, we also have nursing observation, which is actually 24/7 for psychiatric patients, so as to ensure that the treatment plan is fully implemented and adjusted, and to effectively shorten the course of the illness, which is an advantage of inpatient care that is not available to patients in outpatient or home treatment. In addition, the psychiatric hospital is not a scary place, not so gloomy as the community imagines. With the development of drugs and the advancement of treatment, the treatment of psychiatric patients is now incomparable compared to 20 years ago, and now when you walk into such a ward, you will not feel horrible and uneasy. With the rapid development of other disciplines, psychiatry is not yet able to treat the cause of the disease, but the existing treatments have been able to benefit the vast majority of patients, especially those who are early Jane and treated early. Today’s psychiatric patients have every chance to be cured or to be discharged if they can receive systematic treatment. The cure rate for psychiatric patients is actually still high, and in the case of schizophrenia, the cure rate can reach 25%, and if treatment is timely and systematic, it is no exaggeration to say that the overall efficiency rate can reach over 90%, which is generally not as high as other medical disciplines. Psychiatric patients are not abnormal all the time, not in all aspects, but only in certain aspects, leading to the weakening of their social functions and their inability to test the reality of their problems! We can seize the favorable moment to communicate with the patient and persuade him/her to seek early consultation.