Colds are very common and common, except for a very small number of patients who have progressed to chronic illnesses due to the complication of other diseases, most of them recover quickly with proper management. “The clinical manifestations are as diverse as those of a cold, with typical cata-like symptoms in common and other non-cata symptoms. Both undoubtedly require early recognition and timely intervention. The latest data from the Center for Psychiatric and Mental Health of the Chinese Center for Disease Control indicate that as many as 100 million people suffer from psychiatric disorders in China. Patients with cardiovascular disease are prone to comorbid psychiatric disorders, the so-called “double heart disease”, mostly manifested as mood abnormalities and sleep disturbances, and the patients’ own expressions and experiences of psychiatric abnormalities are often difficult to clarify on a case-by-case basis. While organic cardiovascular disease is often fatal, patients who present to cardiovascular medicine with psychiatric problems are often subclinical or have mild to moderate anxiety or depression, and do not meet the diagnostic criteria for mental illness. Cardiovascular physicians should be adept at identifying “life-threatening” organic cardiovascular disease, but also early detection and intervention of “dangerous” psychiatric conditions, such as poor compliance, repeated visits with poor outcomes or complaints against physicians, significant sluggishness The risky or refractory patients who are poorly adherent, have repeated visits with poor outcomes or complaints against physicians, have significant sluggishness, irritability, hallucinations, or have turned excitable or hostile, are at risk for self-injury, suicide, or injury, or need to seek prompt psychiatric care. In 2014, the Chinese Journal of Cardiovascular Diseases published the Chinese Expert Consensus on Psychological Prescription for Patients Presenting to Cardiovascular Units. In addition to recommending screening scales to assess emotional status such as the Somatization Symptom Self-Rating Scale, the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ9), the Generalized Anxiety Questionnaire-7 (GAD-7), and the General Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HAD), the most colorful and feasible recommendation is a brief “three-question approach “(1) Do you have poor sleep that has significantly affected your mental performance during the day or require medication? (2) Is there distraction and loss of interest in things that used to be of interest? (3) Is there any obvious physical discomfort that has not been explained by repeated examinations? If two of the three questions are answered “yes”, the probability of mental disorder is about 80%. The treatment of psychosomatic disorders in patients with cardiovascular disease continues to be recommended as a combination of somato-psychological therapy, which includes exercise therapy, psychological support and medication. If psychosomatic symptoms have been present for more than one month or have caused significant life disorders, antidepressant and anxiolytic medications should be administered promptly with psychological support and patient approval. During the course of treatment, the patient can be scored on a scale, and the effectiveness of medication can be observed according to the change of the scale score, and whether the medication needs to be increased or changed.