With the exception of Bell’s palsy, facial palsy is generally not a diagnosis of disease. Facial palsy is often one of the manifestations of many complex diseases that can suggest the nature of the disease; therefore, the best treatment plan for facial palsy can only be established after further diagnosis of the disease; in addition, each clinical discipline involved in facial palsy has its own area of expertise, so the best plan can only be relative. Here, we would like to make a suggestion and discuss with the experts about the diagnosis and treatment ideas, so that the patients can recover their original faces as much as possible. I. How to seek medical attention after facial palsy occurs? Patients suffering from facial palsy should not be in a hurry, but should actively seek medical treatment as soon as possible, as timely consultation is directly related to the prognosis of facial palsy. After facial palsy, try to choose a specialist hospital for medical treatment. The recommended doctors are a Chinese medicine doctor, a neurologist and an ENT doctor. If one month of treatment is not effective, you should immediately switch to other treatment methods. The choice of facial palsy treatment specialist The choice of facial palsy treatment plan should first be made by making a clear diagnosis, then qualitative and sub-specialty treatment. If the facial palsy is central, the patient should be seen in neurology, and CT, MRI, etc. If the facial palsy is cerebrovascular disease or tumor or other diseases, the primary disease should be treated, and the prognosis of facial palsy is determined by the primary disease. 2. If it is peripheral facial palsy, it cannot be simply called facial neuritis, and it should also be examined by neurology and necessary CT and MRI examinations. (1) Because acute anterior spinal cord poliomyelitis, encephalitis, progressive bulbar palsy, and congenital facial nucleus insufficiency can cause facial nucleus lesions and peripheral facial palsy, which requires differential diagnosis. (2) Cerebrovascular disease (hemorrhage, infarction), tumor, inflammation, and multiple sclerosis can cause lesions of the intramedullary root segment of the facial nerve, resulting in peripheral facial palsy, which is characterized by adductor nerve palsy, oculomotor disorders, or contralateral hemiparesis. (3) Because of skull base aneurysm, meningitis, skull base meningioma and other tumors, cerebellar pontine arachnoiditis, and auditory neuroma, all can cause lesions of the extramedullary root segment of the facial nerve and cause peripheral facial palsy, which is also characterized by symptoms of its original disease and symptoms of decreased secretion of taste, tear, and salivary glands in the anterior 2/3 of the tongue. Peripheral facial palsy arising from the above multiple diseases should be treated conservatively or surgically in neurology, cerebral surgery, and otorhinolaryngology. On the basis of a clear diagnosis, a combination of Chinese and Western medicine treatment plan can be used, with acupuncture and herbal medicine in the acute stage and continued acupuncture and herbal medicine with physiotherapy in the posterior period. (4) Because rock bone fracture, facial nerve sheath tumor, temporal bone tumor, otitis media, cholesteatoma, herpes of knee ganglion, parotid gland tumor, parotitis, facial neuritis, etc. can cause facial neuropathy in the inner segment of rock bone or inferior segment of stem mastoid, respectively, and peripheral facial paralysis can occur. Among them, except for herpes geniculate ganglion and facial neuritis (usually caused by wind, viral infection, emotional fluctuation, surprise, and overexertion), which can be diagnosed as TCM facial palsy pathology and treated with plasters, acupuncture, and Chinese and Western medicines, the rest of the diseases should be treated in specialists, and some must be operated. For peripheral facial palsy in all of the above cases, especially the refractory facial palsy that has been untreated for a long time and has been sought by many doctors, the doctor should re-interrogate the medical history and examination patiently and carefully in order to facilitate differential diagnosis and correct misdiagnosis.