Psychological dependence is not psychological dependence, the concept is different. Psychological dependence is a medical term for the use of psycho-addictive substances (drugs, alcohol, etc.) to which the brain becomes addicted, and once the brain is free of the substance, painful withdrawal symptoms such as anxiety, depression, etc. occur. In search of mental comfort or fear of withdrawal reactions, patients have active demanding behaviors. A proportion of non-schizophrenic patients in clinical practice are found to have a long history of psychiatric consultation and have been on long-term medication. Some have been on medication for several years, some for more than a decade. Except for patients with schizophrenia who require long-term medication, or lifelong medication. The vast majority of people with other mental illnesses (such as neurosis and depression) do not need long-term medication; the brain itself has the ability to heal itself. Their long-term medication is not an overtreatment by psychiatrists, but rather a fear of recurrence of the original illness by the patients themselves. Or some physical discomfort, sensitive to the original disease is not cured. If the psychological uneasiness without medication and the psychological peace of mind with medication, these are psychological problems, in fact, most of the medication at this time is the role of suggestion. This phenomenon is the patient’s reliance on psychotropic drugs as their mental health “umbrella”, ignoring the power of their own mental recovery. This kind of medication is actually not good for the body.