One of the most common sequelae of stroke is hemiplegia. Hemiplegia refers to a loss of muscle strength, adverse movement or complete inability to move one limb. In stroke patients, hemiparesis occurs on the opposite side of the brain lesion because the innervation of the brain is crossed. If there is a brain hemorrhage or cerebral infarction on the left side, it causes hemiplegia on the right side and vice versa. In the past, we always had the notion that the patient is the greatest and it is appropriate to take care of him. However, we would like to point out here that being overly “protective” is very detrimental to the recovery of stroke patients with hemiplegia. This is because being too “protective” and taking care of everything will make the stroke victim underestimate his or her own abilities and become dependent on the family. In addition, for fear of recurrence of the disease, the patient will become more and more “lazy” and will act with fear and caution. In the long run, the patient’s arms and legs will gradually lose their original function, and walking again becomes an impossible task, so he or she has to stay in bed all day. Stroke patients can’t just “raise the main”, this will “spoil” the patient, but will harm the rest of his life. Once the stroke patient has passed the danger period, he can enter the rehabilitation exercise stage. At this time, the patient mainly through a certain way of exercise to promote the functional recovery of paralyzed limbs, prevent contracture of paralyzed limbs, improve physical health, prevent the occurrence of complications, and enable patients to treat the disease with a positive attitude, improve the patient’s mental state. We advocate that once a stroke patient’s condition is stable, he or she can exercise to promote recovery. Although, medical professionals advocate rehabilitation exercises as early as possible, patients and family members are often still apprehensive about early exercises, especially patients with cerebral hemorrhage, who are worried that early activities may cause rebleeding. In fact, the chance of rebleeding caused by rehabilitation exercises is very small. Medical personnel concluded that rehabilitation exercises for patients with cerebral hemorrhage will not cause rebleeding as long as the blood pressure is stable and the movements are not violent, while rehabilitation exercises start too late to prevent sequelae and complications. Stroke rehabilitation must be designed according to the specific situation of the hemiplegic patient. Different training methods are used according to different stages, and one-on-one training between rehabilitation therapist and patient is adopted, including bedside training, bed movement training, walking preparation training, walking training, and training after returning to society, etc. Meanwhile, occupational therapy can promote the recovery of their functions and help patients reach the highest level of self-care, and together with physiotherapy can promote the recovery of central nervous function, prevent muscle atrophy and reduce pain, etc. After systematic rehabilitation training for central palsy, most patients can have better control of spasticity under the premise of accurate analysis by physicians and adoption of timely and correct rehabilitation treatment, which not only enables patients with early hemiplegia to avoid detours and recover limb functions faster and better, but also helps patients with late hemiplegia to correct their wrong training methods, avoid complications such as misuse syndrome, shoulder pain and shoulder-hand syndrome, and Reduce and avoid the occurrence of disability.