Patients at this stage generally show delayed paralysis, no random muscle contraction, and no joint reaction, and the organism is basically in a fully relaxed state; equivalent to Brunstrom recovery stage 1 to 2. 1.Basic purpose: The basic purpose of early rehabilitation is to prevent future comorbidities that will seriously affect the rehabilitation process, such as swelling, muscle shortening, limited joint mobility, etc., and to strive for early functional improvement and prevention of complications. 2. Early rehabilitation methods (1) Correct position: Teach family members and nursing staff to adopt correct position placement, including supine position, healthy side position and affected side position. (2) Turning exercises: cross your hands in front of you, turn to both sides respectively, and support the bed with both feet. (3) bed self-assisted exercises: hands crossed front planks, overhead, side lifts, finger nose, etc., legs bent to support the bed to lift the hips, legs bent to support the bed to lift the hips, feet crossed to move laterally, etc. (4) Bedside passive exercises. (5) Sputum evacuation. (6) Bedside elevation seat training: bedside gradual elevation, each position the patient maintains for 30 minutes, then gradually add 10° retraining until you can sit up at the bedside, no leaning sitting balance exercises. (7) Facial, tongue and lip muscle stimulation: mouth opening, cheek puffing, tooth knocking, tongue extension, tongue on palate, etc., ice cube containing and taste stimulation. (8) Breathing control exercises: ask the patient to inhale deeply → inhale slowly → relax. (9) Reclining and sitting training: Before the head of the bed is raised to 90°, first train the patient to support the head and shoulder lift with one hand after lying on his side until he can support sitting. (10) Sitting balance: correct sitting posture, bedside sitting balance, including front and back, left and right in all directions. (11) Bed and wheelchair (or chair) transfer. (12) Sitting and standing exercises: if available, the patient can be given early standing on an inclined bed to help the patient regain a sense of verticality, regain control of anti-gravity muscles, regain self-regulation of blood pressure, improve standing balance and overcome upright hypotension. In general, patients with cerebral infarction are required to reach bedside sitting after entering the observation group and training group for 3-4 days, and can be trained to stand within two weeks, with auxiliary strength depending on the condition; patients with cerebral hemorrhage should try to reach bedside sitting within two weeks and standing within four weeks. (13) Do activities of daily living with healthy hands: eating, dressing, washing, etc. (14) Apply electrical stimulation. (15) Speech therapy. (16) Psychotherapy.