In the departments of gastroenterology, cardiovascular medicine, respiratory medicine and neurology in general hospitals, we often encounter many such patients who complain of multiple discomforts or long-term recurrent discomforts in one place and have been repeatedly examined in many hospitals or many departments, but no abnormalities were found and the treatment was not effective. Finally, patients often come to the counseling and treatment department with a skeptical attitude on the advice of other doctors. Patients are overly concerned and worried about their various subjective symptoms, often exaggerated, with diverse clinical manifestations, numerous complaints without organic lesions, symptoms involving many systems, and a clinical diagnosis of “somatoform disorder” after examination by a psychiatrist, the main feature of somatoform disorder is the patient’s repeated statements of somatic discomfort and symptoms. The main characteristic of somatoform disorders is the patient’s repeated statements of somatic discomfort, repeated requests for medical examination, ignoring the repeated negative results of the examination, regardless of the doctor’s repeated assurances that the symptoms do not have a somatic disease basis. The onset of symptoms is closely related to the persistence of unpleasant life events, difficulties or conflicts, and the patient often refuses to explore the psychological etiology, assuming that the illness is somatic in nature and requesting further investigations. The main clinical types are as follows: I. Somatization disorders Somatization disorders mainly present with a wide variety of frequently changing somatic symptoms, which can involve any system or organ of the body. The most important feature is the stress-induced unpleasant mood that appears as transforming somatic symptoms. Most common are gastrointestinal discomfort such as pain, hiccups, acid reflux, vomiting, and nausea. Abnormal skin sensations such as itching, aching, tingling, burning, numbness, skin blotches, and complaints regarding menstruation are also common. Significant depression and anxiety are often present. Multiple symptoms may co-exist. Patients have undergone numerous tests for this purpose, with no positive findings, and even surgical exploration has yielded nothing. The course is often chronic and fluctuating, and is accompanied by severe and long-standing social, interpersonal and family behavioral disorders. Hypochondriasis is a persistent hypochondriacal concept in which the patient fears or believes to be suffering from a serious physical disease. Patients therefore repeatedly go to the doctor, all kinds of medical tests can not dispel their doubts, patients suffer from this, often accompanied by anxiety, depression. The main symptoms are neurosis-like symptoms caused by somatic disorders in the autonomic nervous system (cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, respiratory system, etc.). The patient develops non-specific, but more individual and subjective symptoms on top of palpitations, sweating, and flushing, such as pain of variable location, burning, heaviness, tightness, swelling, etc. None of these symptoms on examination proves that the organ system in question is diseased. Somatoform disorder is a psychological disorder in which psychological problems or blocked psychological conflicts manifest themselves in the form of somatic symptoms or somatic reactions. The psychoanalytic doctrine views somatoform disorders as a subconscious process by which a person converts his or her internal conflicts or contradictions into visceral and vegetative dysfunctions in order to escape from the dilemma of the ego. Although the onset and persistence of symptoms in this group of patients is closely related to unpleasant life events, patients often deny the presence of psychological factors. According to the World Health Organization statistics, about 10% of people worldwide have psychological problems, of which the lifetime prevalence of somatoform disorders is 0.2%-2%. It has been found that about 9% of patients in general hospitals meet their diagnostic criteria, and about 99% of patients with somatoform disorders first go to general hospitals. Treatment of somatoform disorders: 1. First, a correct diagnosis should be made to exclude possible organic somatic diseases or other psychiatric disorders; 2. It is not enough to treat only the symptoms stated by the patient, but also to pay attention to the patient’s psychological problems and mental state. Psychotherapy is the basis for treating this disease. Doctors need to understand the patient’s personality characteristics in detail, establish a good doctor-patient relationship, provide a scientific and reasonable explanation of the nature of the disease, and guide the patient to shift his attention from concern for himself to the outside world and gradually get rid of the disease concept by participating in recreational therapy and social activities. 3, In addition, insidious depression will often manifest as somatization disorder. Therefore, receiving psychotherapy can effectively alleviate the phenomenon of somatization disorder. 4.The use of antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications when necessary can also quickly eliminate symptoms.