If a bone is stuck in the throat, feel whether the bone is located on the left or right, or in the middle. If it is on both sides, you can open your mouth to see if there are small bones on both sides of the throat cavity, that is, in the tonsils. If you can find small bones, you can use chopsticks to pinch them out. If there are tweezers, it is better to use them to clip out, but if no obvious bone can be found, you should go to the hospital for further examination. This is because if the bone is stuck in the hypopharynx or even stuck in the esophagus, it is usually impossible to remove it by yourself. If a laryngoscopy at the hospital reveals that the bone is in the hypopharynx, it can be removed directly. If a foreign body is not found in the hypopharynx by laryngoscopy, consider whether there is a bone in the esophagus. If CT or gastroscopy reveals a bone stuck in the esophagus, it can be removed directly in the case of gastroscopy. However, if a foreign body is found by CT or cannot be removed by gastroscopy, an esophagoscopy under general anesthesia may be considered to remove the bone.