Health care for premature beats includes quitting or reducing the intake of cigarettes, alcohol, and coffee, and standardizing your work routine. Premature beats, or preterm contractions, include atrial preterm contractions and ventricular preterm contractions. Atrial preterm contractions, also known as atrial premature beats, usually do not require treatment. Smoking, alcohol and coffee can trigger atrial premature contractions and patients are advised to quit or reduce their consumption. When atrial premature contractions have significant symptoms, they should be actively treated under the supervision of a physician. Ventricular preterm contractions, also known as premature ventricular contractions, do not require treatment in patients who are asymptomatic and do not have organic heart disease (e.g., acute myocardial infarction, congenital heart disease, etc.), and should be standardized to avoid anxiety, restlessness, smoking, coffee, stress, and other triggers for premature ventricular contraction episodes. For patients with obvious symptoms or organic heart disease, they should actively standardize treatment under the guidance of physicians. If there is any discomfort, it is recommended to go to the hospital immediately and follow the doctor’s instructions for treatment.