In the contemporary psychiatric field, therapists are increasingly applying cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in their work, rather than treating schizophrenic patients with medication alone. Research and practical experience at home and abroad have demonstrated the efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy, which is better than medication alone when used in conjunction with medication and can prevent relapse. A boon for schizophrenia patients is cognitive-behavioral therapy. Treatment typically requires about 20 sessions of ongoing therapy, once a week for 45 minutes. The frequency is high at the beginning, perhaps 2-3 times a week, mostly once a week in maintenance treatment, and in the final phase the inter-treatment interval may be extended, once every 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, etc., and eventually treatment is discontinued. Once the disease relapses, CBT can also be continued to be applied and good results will continue to be achieved. I recently applied CBT for schizophrenia and achieved good results. One patient found a new job after more than 1 year of treatment and was treated only with small doses of medication maintenance and persisted in applying CBT. Another patient entered medication combined with CBT treatment at new onset, quickly stabilized his mood, cultivated a good therapeutic relationship, and believes that he can still be treated with low-dose medication maintenance and adhere to CBT application in the future. Again, we wish the patients to adopt scientific treatment, i.e., cognitive-behavioral therapy in combination with medication, as early as possible to achieve good results.