The Historical Records – Bianyi Canggong Biography said: “People’s disease, disease more; and the doctor’s disease, the path of disease less. Therefore, the disease has six not to cure: arrogance regardless of reason, one not to cure; light body and heavy wealth, two not to cure; food and clothing can not fit, three not to cure; yin and Yang and hide, gas uncertainty, four not to cure; shape can not take medicine, five not to cure; believe in the witch does not believe in the doctor, six not to cure. With this one, it is difficult to cure.” It means that the general public is worried about the number of diseases; and the doctor is worried about the few ways to cure the disease. There are six kinds of patients who are not easy to cure: those who are arrogant and indulgent and unreasonable, those who value their bodies less than their possessions, those who cannot adjust their clothes and food, those whose qi and blood are disordered and whose dirty qi is restless, those who are weak and cannot use medicine, and those who are superstitious in witchcraft and do not believe in the way of medicine. In the early Warring States period, the famous doctor Bian Magpie proposed the “six no-treatment” guideline for the practice of medicine, which I think is of reference value to both doctors and medical practitioners nowadays. We often encounter patients who are arrogant, regardless of reason, or light on their bodies and money, or who cannot adhere to medical advice (especially those with chronic diseases requiring long-term treatment); in primary hospitals, there are often those who “believe in witchcraft but not in medicine”. How to treat such patients? You may want to learn from the practice of the magpie. Medicine is an exploratory science, no matter how advanced it is, there are things unknown. I remember my teacher telling us when I was a student that the development of medicine to date has always ended in human failure in the fight against disease. The profession of doctor seems to be given a sad color from the very beginning, although repeatedly defeated, but never give up, generation after generation of struggle.